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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Army Life in a Black Regiment
+by Thomas Wentworth Higginson
+
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+Title: Army Life in a Black Regiment
+
+Author: Thomas Wentworth Higginson
+
+Release Date: October, 2004 [EBook #6764]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on January 24, 2003]
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+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, ARMY LIFE IN A BLACK REGIMENT ***
+
+
+
+
+This eBook was provided by Eric Eldred.
+
+
+
+
+
+Army Life
+in a
+Black Regiment
+
+
+Thomas Wentworth Higginson
+(1823-1911)
+
+
+Originally published 1869
+Reprinted, 1900, by Riverside Press
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER 1 Introductory
+
+CHAPTER 2 Camp Diary
+
+CHAPTER 3 Up the St. Mary's
+
+CHAPTER 4 Up the St. John's
+
+CHAPTER 5 Out on Picket
+
+CHAPTER 6 A Night in the Water
+
+CHAPTER 7 Up the Edisto
+
+CHAPTER 8 The Baby of the Regiment
+
+CHAPTER 9 Negro Spirituals
+
+CHAPTER 10 Life at Camp Shaw
+
+CHAPTER 11 Florida Again?
+
+CHAPTER 12 The Negro as a Soldier
+
+CHAPTER 13 Conclusion
+
+APPENDIX
+
+A. Roster of Officers
+B. The First Black Soldiers
+C. General Saxton's Instructions
+D. The Struggle for Pay
+E. Farewell Address
+
+Index
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 1
+Introductory
+
+
+These pages record some of the adventures of the First South Carolina
+Volunteers, the first slave regiment mustered into the service of the
+United States during the late civil war. It was, indeed, the first
+colored regiment of any kind so mustered, except a portion of the troops
+raised by Major-General Butler at New Orleans. These scarcely belonged
+to the same class, however, being recruited from the free colored
+population of that city, a comparatively self-reliant and educated race.
+"The darkest of them," said General Butler, "were about the complexion
+of the late Mr. Webster."
+
+The First South Carolina, on the other hand, contained scarcely a
+freeman, had not one mulatto in ten, and a far smaller proportion who
+could read or write when enlisted. The only contemporary regiment of a
+similar character was the "First Kansas Colored," which began
+recruiting a little earlier, though it was not mustered in the usual
+basis of military seniority till later. [_See Appendix_] These were
+the only colored regiments recruited during the year 1862. The Second
+South Carolina and the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts followed early in
+1863.
+
+This is the way in which I came to the command of this
+regiment. One day in November, 1862, I was sitting at dinner with my
+lieutenants, John Goodell and Luther Bigelow, in the barracks of the
+Fifty-First Massachusetts, Colonel Sprague, when the following letter
+was put into my hands:
+
+BEAUFORT, S. C.,
+November 5, 1862.
+
+MY DEAR SIR.
+
+I am organizing the First Regiment of South Carolina Volunteers, with
+every prospect of success. Your name has been spoken of, in connection
+with the command of this regiment, by some friends in whose judgment I
+have confidence. I take great pleasure in offering you the position of
+Colonel in it, and hope that you may be induced to accept. I shall not
+fill the place until I hear from you, or sufficient time shall have
+passed for me to receive your reply. Should you accept, I enclose a
+pass for Port Royal, of which I trust you will feel disposed to avail
+yourself at once. I am, with sincere regard, yours truly,
+
+R. SAXTON, _Brig.-Genl, Mil. Gov._
+
+Had an invitation reached me to take command of a regiment of Kalmuck
+Tartars, it could hardly have been more unexpected. I had always looked
+for the arming of the blacks, and had always felt a wish to be
+associated with them; had read the scanty accounts of General Hunter's
+abortive regiment, and had heard rumors of General Saxton's renewed
+efforts. But the prevalent tone of public sentiment was still opposed to
+any such attempts; the government kept very shy of the experiment, and
+it did not seem possible that the time had come when it could be fairly
+tried.
+
+For myself, I was at the head of a fine company of my own raising, and
+in a regiment to which I was already much attached. It did not seem
+desirable to exchange a certainty for an uncertainty; for who knew but
+General Saxton might yet be thwarted in his efforts by the pro-slavery
+influence that had still so much weight at head-quarters? It would be
+intolerable to go out to South Carolina, and find myself, after all, at
+the head of a mere plantation-guard or a day-school in uniform.
+
+I therefore obtained from the War Department, through Governor Andrew,
+permission to go and report to General Saxton, without at once resigning
+my captaincy. Fortunately it took but a few days in South Carolina to
+make it clear that all was right, and the return steamer took back a
+resignation of a Massachusetts commission. Thenceforth my lot was cast
+altogether with the black troops, except when regiments or detachments
+of white soldiers were also under my command, during the two years
+following.
+
+These details would not be worth mentioning except as they show this
+fact: that I did not seek the command of colored troops, but it sought
+me. And this fact again is only important to my story for this reason,
+that under these circumstances I naturally viewed the new recruits
+rather as subjects for discipline than for philanthropy. I had been
+expecting a war for six years, ever since the Kansas troubles, and my
+mind had dwelt on military matters more or less during all that time.
+The best Massachusetts regiments already exhibited a high standard of
+drill and discipline, and unless these men could be brought tolerably
+near that standard, the fact of their extreme blackness would afford me,
+even as a philanthropist, no satisfaction. Fortunately, I felt perfect
+confidence that they could be so trained, having happily known, by
+experience, the qualities of their race, and knowing also that they had
+home and household and freedom to fight for, besides that abstraction of
+"the Union." Trouble might perhaps be expected from white officials,
+though this turned out far less than might have been feared; but there
+was no trouble to come from the men, I thought, and none ever came. On
+the other hand, it was a vast experiment of indirect philanthropy, and
+one on which the result of the war and the destiny of the negro race
+might rest; and this was enough to tax all one's powers. I had been an
+abolitionist too long, and had known and loved John Brown too well, not
+to feel a thrill of joy at last on finding myself in the position where
+he only wished to be.
+
+In view of all this, it was clear that good discipline must come first;
+after that, of course, the men must be helped and elevated in all ways
+as much as possible.
+
+Of discipline there was great need, that is, of order and regular
+instruction. Some of the men had already been under fire, but they were
+very ignorant of drill and camp duty. The officers, being appointed from
+a dozen different States, and more than as many regiments, infantry,
+cavalry, artillery, and engineers, had all that diversity of methods
+which so confused our army in those early days. The first need,
+therefore, was of an unbroken interval of training. During this period,
+which fortunately lasted nearly two months, I rarely left the camp, and
+got occasional leisure moments for a fragmentary journal, to send home,
+recording the many odd or novel aspects of the new experience. Camp-life
+was a wonderfully strange sensation to almost all volunteer officers,
+and mine lay among eight hundred men suddenly transformed from slaves
+into soldiers, and representing a race affectionate, enthusiastic,
+grotesque, and dramatic beyond all others. Being such, they naturally
+gave material for description. There is nothing like a diary for
+freshness, at least so I think, and I shall keep to the diary through
+the days of camp-life, and throw the later experience into another form.
+Indeed, that matter takes care of itself; diaries and letter-writing
+stop when field-service begins.
+
+I am under pretty heavy bonds to tell the truth, and only the truth;
+for those who look back to the newspaper correspondence of that period
+will see that this particular regiment lived for months in a glare of
+publicity, such as tests any regiment severely, and certainly prevents
+all subsequent romancing in its historian. As the scene of the only
+effort on the Atlantic coast to arm the negro, our camp attracted a
+continuous stream of visitors, military and civil. A battalion of
+black soldiers, a spectacle since so common, seemed then the most
+daring of innovations, and the whole demeanor of this particular
+regiment was watched with microscopic scrutiny by friends and foes. I
+felt sometimes as if we were a plant trying to take root, but
+constantly pulled up to see if we were growing. The slightest camp
+incidents sometimes came back to us, magnified and distorted, in
+letters of anxious inquiry from remote parts of the Union. It was no
+pleasant thing to live under such constant surveillance; but it
+guaranteed the honesty of any success, while fearfully multiplying the
+penalties had there been a failure. A single mutiny, such as has
+happened in the infancy of a hundred regiments, a single miniature
+Bull Run, a stampede of desertions, and it would have been all over
+with us; the party of distrust would have got the upper hand, and
+there might not have been, during the whole contest, another effort to
+arm the negro.
+
+I may now proceed, without farther preparation to the Diary.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 2
+Camp Diary
+
+
+CAMP SAXTON, near Beaufort, S. C.,
+November 24, 1862.
+
+Yesterday afternoon we were steaming over a summer sea, the deck level
+as a parlor-floor, no land in sight, no sail, until at last appeared one
+light-house, said to be Cape Romaine, and then a line of trees and two
+distant vessels and nothing more. The sun set, a great illuminated
+bubble, submerged in one vast bank of rosy suffusion; it grew dark;
+after tea all were on deck, the people sang hymns; then the moon set, a
+moon two days old, a curved pencil of light, reclining backwards on a
+radiant couch which seemed to rise from the waves to receive it; it sank
+slowly, and the last tip wavered and went down like the mast of a vessel
+of the skies. Towards morning the boat stopped, and when I came on deck,
+before six,
+
+ "The watch-lights glittered on the land,
+ The ship-lights on the sea."
+
+Hilton Head lay on one side, the gunboats on the other; all that was
+raw and bare in the low buildings of the new settlement was softened
+into picturesqueness by the early light. Stars were still overhead,
+gulls wheeled and shrieked, and the broad river rippled duskily
+towards Beaufort.
+
+The shores were low and wooded, like any New England shore; there were a
+few gunboats, twenty schooners, and some steamers, among them the famous
+"Planter," which Robert Small, the slave, presented to the nation. The
+river-banks were soft and graceful, though low, and as we steamed up to
+Beaufort on the flood-tide this morning, it seemed almost as fair as the
+smooth and lovely canals which Stedman traversed to meet his negro
+soldiers in Surinam. The air was cool as at home, yet the foliage seemed
+green, glimpses of stiff tropical vegetation appeared along the banks,
+with great clumps of shrubs, whose pale seed-vessels looked like tardy
+blossoms. Then we saw on a picturesque point an old plantation, with
+stately magnolia avenue, decaying house, and tiny church amid the woods,
+reminding me of Virginia; behind it stood a neat encampment of white
+tents, "and there," said my companion, "is your future regiment."
+
+Three miles farther brought us to the pretty town of Beaufort, with its
+stately houses amid Southern foliage. Reporting to General Saxton, I had
+the luck to encounter a company of my destined command, marched in to be
+mustered into the United States service. They were unarmed, and all
+looked as thoroughly black as the most faithful philanthropist could
+desire; there did not seem to be so much as a mulatto among them. Their
+coloring suited me, all but the legs, which were clad in a lively
+scarlet, as intolerable to my eyes as if I had been a turkey. I saw them
+mustered; General Saxton talked to them a little, in his direct, manly
+way; they gave close attention, though their faces looked impenetrable.
+Then I conversed with some of them. The first to whom I spoke had been
+wounded in a small expedition after lumber, from which a party had
+just returned, and in which they had been under fire and had done very
+well. I said, pointing to his lame arm,
+
+"Did you think that was more than you bargained for, my man?"
+
+His answer came promptly and stoutly,
+
+"I been a-tinking, Mas'r, dot's jess what I went for."
+
+I thought this did well enough for my very first interchange of dialogue
+with my recruits.
+
+
+November 27, 1862.
+
+Thanksgiving-Day; it is the first moment I have had for writing during
+these three days, which have installed me into a new mode of life so
+thoroughly that they seem three years. Scarcely pausing in New York or
+in Beaufort, there seems to have been for me but one step from the camp
+of a Massachusetts regiment to this, and that step over leagues of waves.
+
+It is a holiday wherever General Saxton's proclamation reaches. The
+chilly sunshine and the pale blue river seems like New England, but
+those alone. The air is full of noisy drumming, and of gunshots; for the
+prize-shooting is our great celebration of the day, and the drumming is
+chronic. My young barbarians are all at play. I look out from the broken
+windows of this forlorn plantation-house, through avenues of great
+live-oaks, with their hard, shining leaves, and their branches hung with
+a universal drapery of soft, long moss, like fringe-trees struck with
+grayness. Below, the sandy soil, scantly covered with coarse grass,
+bristles with sharp palmettoes and aloes; all the vegetation is stiff,
+shining, semi-tropical, with nothing soft or delicate in its texture.
+Numerous plantation-buildings totter around, all slovenly and
+unattractive, while the interspaces are filled with all manner of wreck
+and refuse, pigs, fowls, dogs, and omnipresent Ethiopian infancy. All
+this is the universal Southern panorama; but five minutes' walk beyond
+the hovels and the live-oaks will bring one to something so un-Southern
+that the whole Southern coast at this moment trembles at the suggestion
+of such a thing, the camp of a regiment of freed slaves.
+
+One adapts one's self so readily to new surroundings that already the
+full zest of the novelty seems passing away from my perceptions, and I
+write these lines in an eager effort to retain all I can. Already I am
+growing used to the experience, at first so novel, of living among five
+hundred men, and scarce a white face to be seen, of seeing them go
+through all their daily processes, eating, frolicking, talking, just as if
+they were white. Each day at dress-parade I stand with the customary
+folding of the arms before a regimental line of countenances so black
+that I can hardly tell whether the men stand steadily or not; black is
+every hand which moves in ready cadence as I vociferate, "Battalion!
+Shoulder arms!" nor is it till the line of white officers moves forward,
+as parade is dismissed, that I am reminded that my own face is not the
+color of coal.
+
+The first few days on duty with a new regiment must be devoted almost
+wholly to tightening reins; in this process one deals chiefly with the
+officers, and I have as yet had but little personal intercourse with the
+men. They concern me chiefly in bulk, as so many consumers of rations,
+wearers of uniforms, bearers of muskets. But as the machine comes into
+shape, I am beginning to decipher the individual parts. At first, of
+course, they all looked just alike; the variety comes afterwards, and
+they are just as distinguishable, the officers say, as so many whites.
+Most of them are wholly raw, but there are many who have already been
+for months in camp in the abortive "Hunter Regiment," yet in that loose
+kind of way which, like average militia training, is a doubtful
+advantage. I notice that some companies, too, look darker than others,
+though all are purer African than I expected. This is said to be partly
+a geographical difference between the South Carolina and Florida men.
+When the Rebels evacuated this region they probably took with them the
+house-servants, including most of the mixed blood, so that the residuum
+seems very black. But the men brought from Fernandina the other day
+average lighter in complexion, and look more intelligent, and they
+certainly take wonderfully to the drill.
+
+It needs but a few days to show the absurdity of distrusting the
+military availability of these people. They have quite as much average
+comprehension as whites of the need of the thing, as much courage (I
+doubt not), as much previous knowledge of the gun, and, above all, a
+readiness of ear and of imitation, which, for purposes of drill,
+counterbalances any defect of mental training. To learn the drill, one
+does not want a set of college professors; one wants a squad of eager,
+active, pliant school-boys; and the more childlike these pupils are
+the better. There is no trouble about the drill; they will surpass
+whites in that. As to camp-life, they have little to sacrifice; they
+are better fed, housed, and clothed than ever in their lives before,
+and they appear to have few inconvenient vices. They are simple,
+docile, and affectionate almost to the point of absurdity. The same
+men who stood fire in open field with perfect coolness, on the late
+expedition, have come to me blubbering in the most irresistibly
+ludicrous manner on being transferred from one company in the regiment
+to another.
+
+In noticing the squad-drills I perceive that the men learn less
+laboriously than whites that "double, double, toil and trouble," which
+is the elementary vexation of the drill-master, that they more rarely
+mistake their left for their right, and are more grave and sedate while
+under instruction. The extremes of jollity and sobriety, being greater
+with them, are less liable to be intermingled; these companies can be
+driven with a looser rein than my former one, for they restrain
+themselves; but the moment they are dismissed from drill every tongue is
+relaxed and every ivory tooth visible. This morning I wandered about
+where the different companies were target-shooting, and their glee was
+contagious. Such exulting shouts of "Ki! ole man," when some steady old
+turkey-shooter brought his gun down for an instant's aim, and then
+unerringly hit the mark; and then, when some unwary youth fired his
+piece into the ground at half-cock such guffawing and delight, such
+rolling over and over on the grass, such dances of ecstasy, as made the
+"Ethiopian minstrelsy" of the stage appear a feeble imitation.
+
+Evening. Better still was a scene on which I stumbled to-night.
+Strolling in the cool moonlight, I was attracted by a brilliant light
+beneath the trees, and cautiously approached it. A circle of thirty or
+forty soldiers sat around a roaring fire, while one old uncle, Cato by
+name, was narrating an interminable tale, to the insatiable delight of
+his audience. I came up into the dusky background, perceived only by a
+few, and he still continued. It was a narrative, dramatized to the
+last degree, of his adventures in escaping from his master to the
+Union vessels; and even I, who have heard the stories of Harriet
+Tubman, and such wonderful slave-comedians, never witnessed such a
+piece of acting. When I came upon the scene he had just come
+unexpectedly upon a plantation-house, and, putting a bold face upon
+it, had walked up to the door.
+
+"Den I go up to de white man, berry humble, and say, would he please gib
+ole man a mouthful for eat?
+
+"He say he must hab de valeration ob half a dollar.
+
+"Den I look berry sorry, and turn for go away.
+
+"Den he say I might gib him dat hatchet I had.
+
+"Den I say" (this in a tragic vein) "dat I must hab dat hatchet for
+defend myself _from de dogs_!"
+
+[Immense applause, and one appreciating auditor says, chuckling, "Dat
+was your _arms_, ole man," which brings down the house again.]
+
+"Den he say de Yankee pickets was near by, and I must be very keerful.
+
+"Den I say, 'Good Lord, Mas'r, am dey?'"
+
+Words cannot express the complete dissimulation with which these accents
+of terror were uttered, this being precisely the piece of information he
+wished to obtain.
+
+Then he narrated his devices to get into the house at night and obtain
+some food, how a dog flew at him, how the whole household, black and
+white, rose in pursuit, how he scrambled under a hedge and over a high
+fence, etc., all in a style of which Gough alone among orators can give
+the faintest impression, so thoroughly dramatized was every syllable.
+
+Then he described his reaching the river-side at last, and trying to
+decide whether certain vessels held friends or foes.
+
+"Den I see guns on board, and sure sartin he Union boat, and I pop my
+head up. Den I been-a-tink [think] Seceshkey hab guns too, and my head
+go down again. Den I hide in de bush till morning. Den I open my
+bundle, and take ole white shut and tie him on ole pole and wave him,
+and ebry time de wind blow, I been-a-tremble, and drap down in de
+bushes," because, being between two fires, he doubted whether friend
+or foe would see his signal first. And so on, with a succession of
+tricks beyond Moliere, of acts of caution, foresight, patient cunning,
+which were listened to with infinite gusto and perfect comprehension
+by every listener.
+
+And all this to a bivouac of negro soldiers, with the brilliant fire
+lighting up their red trousers and gleaming from their shining black
+faces, eyes and teeth all white with tumultuous glee. Overhead, the
+mighty limbs of a great live-oak, with the weird moss swaying in the
+smoke, and the high moon gleaming faintly through.
+
+Yet to-morrow strangers will remark on the hopeless, impenetrable
+stupidity in the daylight faces of many of these very men, the solid
+mask under which Nature has concealed all this wealth of mother-wit.
+This very comedian is one to whom one might point, as he hoed lazily in
+a cotton-field, as a being the light of whose brain had utterly gone
+out; and this scene seems like coming by night upon some conclave of
+black beetles, and finding them engaged, with green-room and
+foot-lights, in enacting "Poor Pillicoddy." This is their university;
+every young Sambo before me, as he turned over the sweet potatoes and
+peanuts which were roasting in the ashes, listened with reverence to the
+wiles of the ancient Ulysses, and meditated the same. It is Nature's
+compensation; oppression simply crushes the upper faculties of the head,
+and crowds everything into the perceptive organs. Cato, thou reasonest
+well! When I get into any serious scrape, in an enemy's country, may I
+be lucky enough to have you at my elbow, to pull me out of itl
+
+The men seem to have enjoyed the novel event of Thanksgiving-Day; they
+have had company and regimental prize-shootings, a minimum of speeches
+and a maximum of dinner. Bill of fare: two beef-cattle and a thousand
+oranges. The oranges cost a cent apiece, and the cattle were Secesh,
+bestowed by General Saxby, as they all call him.
+
+
+December 1, 1862.
+
+How absurd is the impression bequeathed by Slavery in regard to these
+Southern blacks, that they are sluggish and inefficient in labor! Last
+night, after a hard day's work (our guns and the remainder of our tents
+being just issued), an order came from Beaufort that we should be ready
+in the evening to unload a steamboat's cargo of boards, being some of those
+captured by them a few weeks since, and now assigned for their use. I
+wondered if the men would grumble at the night-work; but the steamboat
+arrived by seven, and it was bright moonlight when they went at it.
+Never have I beheld such a jolly scene of labor. Tugging these wet and
+heavy boards over a bridge of boats ashore, then across the slimy beach
+at low tide, then up a steep bank, and all in one great uproar of
+merriment for two hours. Running most of the time, chattering all the
+time, snatching the boards from each other's backs as if they were some
+coveted treasure, getting up eager rivalries between different
+companies, pouring great choruses of ridicule on the heads of all
+shirkers, they made the whole scene so enlivening that I gladly stayed
+out in the moonlight for the whole time to watch it. And all this
+without any urging or any promised reward, but simply as the most
+natural way of doing the thing. The steamboat captain declared that they
+unloaded the ten thousand feet of boards quicker than any white gang
+could have done it; and they felt it so little, that, when, later in the
+night, I reproached one whom I found sitting by a campfire, cooking a
+surreptitious opossum, telling him that he ought to be asleep after such
+a job of work, he answered, with the broadest grin, "O no, Gunnel, da's
+no work at all, Gunnel; dat only jess enough for stretch we."
+
+
+December 2, 1862.
+
+I believe I have not yet enumerated the probable drawbacks to the
+success of this regiment, if any. We are exposed to no direct annoyance
+from the white regiments, being out of their way; and we have as yet no
+discomforts or privations which we do not share with them. I do not as
+yet see the slightest obstacle, in the nature of the blacks, to making
+them good soldiers, but rather the contrary. They take readily to drill,
+and do not object to discipline; they are not especially dull or
+inattentive; they seem fully to understand the importance of the
+contest, and of their share in it. They show no jealousy or suspicion
+towards their officers.
+
+They do show these feelings, however, towards the Government
+itself; and no one can wonder. Here lies the drawback to rapid
+recruiting. Were this a wholly new regiment, it would have been full to
+overflowing, I am satisfied, ere now. The trouble is in the legacy of
+bitter distrust bequeathed by the abortive regiment of General
+Hunter, into which they were driven like cattle, kept for several months
+in camp, and then turned off without a shilling, by order of the War
+Department. The formation of that regiment was, on the whole, a great
+injury to this one; and the men who came from it, though the best
+soldiers we have in other respects, are the least sanguine and cheerful;
+while those who now refuse to enlist have a great influence in deterring
+others. Our soldiers are constantly twitted by their families and
+friends with their prospect of risking their lives in the service, and
+being paid nothing; and it is in vain that we read them the instructions
+of the Secretary of War to General Saxton, promising them the full pay
+of soldiers. They only half believe it.*
+
+*With what utter humiliation were we, their officers, obliged to
+confess to them, eighteen months afterwards, that it was their distrust
+which was wise, and our faith in the pledges of the United States
+Government which was foolishness!
+
+Another drawback is that some of the white soldiers delight in
+frightening the women on the plantations with doleful tales of plans for
+putting us in the front rank in all battles, and such silly talk,--the
+object being perhaps, to prevent our being employed on active service at
+all. All these considerations they feel precisely as white men would,--no
+less, no more; and it is the comparative freedom from such unfavorable
+influences which makes the Florida men seem more bold and manly, as they
+undoubtedly do. To-day General Saxton has returned from Fernandina with
+seventy-six recruits, and the eagerness of the captains to secure them
+was a sight to see. Yet they cannot deny that some of the very best men
+in the regiment are South Carolinians.
+
+
+December 3, 1862.--7 P.M.
+
+What a life is this I lead! It is a dark, mild, drizzling evening, and
+as the foggy air breeds sand-flies, so it calls out melodies and
+strange antics from this mysterious race of grown-up children with
+whom my lot is cast. All over the camp the lights glimmer in the
+tents, and as I sit at my desk in the open doorway, there come mingled
+sounds of stir and glee. Boys laugh and shout,--a feeble flute stirs
+somewhere in some tent, not an officer's,--a drum throbs far away in
+another,--wild kildeer-plover flit and wail above us, like the
+haunting souls of dead slave-masters,--and from a neighboring
+cook-fire comes the monotonous sound of that strange festival, half
+pow-wow, half prayer-meeting, which they know only as a "shout." These
+fires are usually enclosed in a little booth, made neatly of
+palm-leaves and covered in at top, a regular native African hut, in
+short, such as is pictured in books, and such as I once got up from
+dried palm-leaves for a fair at home. This hut is now crammed with
+men, singing at the top of their voices, in one of their quaint,
+monotonous, endless, negro-Methodist chants, with obscure syllables
+recurring constantly, and slight variations interwoven, all
+accompanied with a regular drumming of the feet and clapping of the
+hands, like castanets. Then the excitement spreads: inside and outside
+the enclosure men begin to quiver and dance, others join, a circle
+forms, winding monotonously round some one in the centre; some "heel
+and toe" tumultuously, others merely tremble and stagger on, others
+stoop and rise, others whirl, others caper sideways, all keep steadily
+circling like dervishes; spectators applaud special strokes of skill;
+my approach only enlivens the scene; the circle enlarges, louder grows
+the singing, rousing shouts of encouragement come in, half
+bacchanalian, half devout, "Wake 'em, brudder!" "Stan' up to 'em,
+brudder!"--and still the ceaseless drumming and clapping, in perfect
+cadence, goes steadily on. Suddenly there comes a sort of snap, and
+the spell breaks, amid general sighing and laughter. And this not
+rarely and occasionally, but night after night, while in other parts
+of the camp the soberest prayers and exhortations are proceeding
+sedately.
+
+A simple and lovable people, whose graces seem to come by nature, and
+whose vices by training. Some of the best superintendents confirm the
+first tales of innocence, and Dr. Zachos told me last night that on
+his plantation, a sequestered one, "they had absolutely no vices." Nor
+have these men of mine yet shown any worth mentioning; since I took
+command I have heard of no man intoxicated, and there has been but one
+small quarrel. I suppose that scarcely a white regiment in the army
+shows so little swearing. Take the "Progressive Friends" and put them
+in red trousers, and I verily believe they would fill a guard-house
+sooner than these men. If camp regulations are violated, it seems to
+be usually through heedlessness. They love passionately three things
+besides their spiritual incantations; namely, sugar, home, and
+tobacco. This last affection brings tears to their eyes, almost, when
+they speak of their urgent need of pay; they speak of then"
+last-remembered quid as if it were some deceased relative, too early
+lost, and to be mourned forever. As for sugar, no white man can drink
+coffee after they have sweetened it to their liking.
+
+I see that the pride which military life creates may cause the
+plantation trickeries to diminish. For instance, these men make the most
+admirable sentinels. It is far harder to pass the camp lines at night
+than in the camp from which I came; and I have seen none of that
+disposition to connive at the offences of members of one's own company
+which is so troublesome among white soldiers. Nor are they lazy, either
+about work or drill; in all respects they seem better material for
+soldiers than I had dared to hope.
+
+There is one company in particular, all Florida men, which I certainly
+think the finest-looking company I ever saw, white or black; they range
+admirably in size, have remarkable erectness and ease of carriage, and
+really march splendidly. Not a visitor but notices them; yet they have
+been under drill only a fortnight, and a part only two days. They have
+all been slaves, and very few are even mulattoes.
+
+
+December 4, 1862.
+
+"Dwelling in tents, with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob." This condition is
+certainly mine,--and with a multitude of patriarchs beside, not to
+mention Caesar and Pompey, Hercules and Bacchus.
+
+A moving life, tented at night, this experience has been mine in civil
+society, if society be civil before the luxurious forest fires of Maine
+and the Adirondack, or upon the lonely prairies of Kansas. But a
+stationary tent life, deliberately going to housekeeping under canvas, I
+have never had before, though in our barrack life at "Camp Wool" I often
+wished for it.
+
+The accommodations here are about as liberal as my quarters there, two
+wall-tents being placed end to end, for office and bedroom, and
+separated at will by a "fly" of canvas. There is a good board floor and
+mop-board, effectually excluding dampness and draughts, and everything
+but sand, which on windy days penetrates everywhere. The office
+furniture consists of a good desk or secretary, a very clumsy and
+disastrous settee, and a remarkable chair. The desk is a bequest of the
+slaveholders, and the settee of the slaves, being ecclesiastical in its
+origin, and appertaining to the little old church or "praise-house," now
+used for commissary purposes. The chair is a composite structure: I
+found a cane seat on a dust-heap, which a black sergeant combined with
+two legs from a broken bedstead and two more from an oak-bough. I sit on
+it with a pride of conscious invention, mitigated by profound
+insecurity. Bedroom furniture, a couch made of gun-boxes covered with
+condemned blankets, another settee, two pails, a tin cup, tin basin (we
+prize any tin or wooden ware as savages prize iron), and a valise,
+regulation size. Seriously considered, nothing more appears needful,
+unless ambition might crave another chair for company, and, perhaps,
+something for a wash-stand higher than a settee.
+
+To-day it rains hard, and the wind quivers through the closed canvas,
+and makes one feel at sea. All the talk of the camp outside is fused
+into a cheerful and indistinguishable murmur, pierced through at every
+moment by the wail of the hovering plover. Sometimes a face, black or
+white, peers through the entrance with some message. Since the light
+readily penetrates, though the rain cannot, the tent conveys a feeling
+of charmed security, as if an invisible boundary checked the pattering
+drops and held the moaning wind. The front tent I share, as yet, with
+my adjutant; in the inner apartment I reign supreme, bounded in a
+nutshell, with no bad dreams.
+
+In all pleasant weather the outer "fly" is open, and men pass and
+repass, a chattering throng. I think of Emerson's Saadi, "As thou
+sittest at thy door, on the desert's yellow floor,"--for these bare
+sand-plains, gray above, are always yellow when upturned, and there
+seems a tinge of Orientalism in all our life.
+
+Thrice a day we go to the plantation-houses for our meals,
+camp-arrangements being yet very imperfect. The officers board in
+different messes, the adjutant and I still clinging to the household of
+William Washington,--William the quiet and the courteous, the pattern of
+house-servants, William the noiseless, the observing, the
+discriminating, who knows everything that can be got, and how to cook
+it. William and his tidy, lady-like little spouse Hetty--a pair of wedded
+lovers, if ever I saw one--set our table in their one room, half-way
+between an un glazed window and a large wood-fire, such as is often
+welcome. Thanks to the adjutant, we are provided with the social
+magnificence of napkins; while (lest pride take too high a flight) our
+table-cloth consists of two "New York Tribunes" and a "Leslie's
+Pictorial." Every steamer brings us a clean table-cloth. Here are we
+forever supplied with pork and oysters and sweet potatoes and rice and
+hominy and corn-bread and milk; also mysterious griddle-cakes of corn
+and pumpkin; also preserves made of pumpkin-chips, and other fanciful
+productions of Ethiop art. Mr. E. promised the
+plantation-superintendents who should come down here "all the luxuries
+of home," and we certainly have much apparent, if little real variety.
+Once William produced with some palpitation something fricasseed, which
+he boldly termed chicken; it was very small, and seemed in some
+undeveloped condition of ante-natal toughness. After the meal he frankly
+avowed it for a squirrel.
+
+
+December 5, 1862.
+
+Give these people their tongues, their feet, and their leisure, and
+they are happy. At every twilight the air is full of singing, talking,
+and clapping of hands in unison. One of their favorite songs is full
+of plaintive cadences; it is not, I think, a Methodist tune, and I
+wonder where they obtained a chant of such beauty.
+
+ "I can't stay behind, my Lord, I can't stay behind!
+ O, my father is gone, my father is gone,
+ My father is gone into heaven, my Lord!
+ I can't stay behind!
+ Dere's room enough, room enough,
+ Room enough in de heaven for de sojer:
+ Can't stay behind!"
+
+It always excites them to have us looking on, yet they sing these songs
+at all times and seasons. I have heard this very song dimly droning on
+near midnight, and, tracing it into the recesses of a cook-house, have
+found an old fellow coiled away among the pots and provisions, chanting
+away with his "Can't stay behind, sinner," till I made him leave his
+song behind.
+
+This evening, after working themselves up to the highest pitch, a
+party suddenly rushed off, got a barrel, and mounted some man upon it,
+who said, "Gib anoder song, boys, and I'se gib you a speech." After
+some hesitation and sundry shouts of "Rise de sing, somebody," and
+"Stan' up for Jesus, brud-der," irreverently put in by the juveniles,
+they got upon the John Brown song, always a favorite, adding a
+jubilant verse which I had never before heard,--"We'll beat Beauregard
+on de clare battlefield." Then came the promised speech, and then no
+less than seven other speeches by as many men, on a variety of
+barrels, each orator being affectionately tugged to the pedestal and
+set on end by his specal constituency. Every speech was good, without
+exception; with the queerest oddities of phrase and pronunciation,
+there was an invariable enthusiasm, a pungency of statement, and an
+understanding of the points at issue, which made them all rather
+thrilling. Those long-winded slaves in "Among the Pines" seemed rather
+fictitious and literary in comparison. The most eloquent, perhaps, was
+Corporal Price Lambkin, just arrived from Fernandina, who evidently
+had a previous reputation among them. His historical references were
+very interesting. He reminded them that he had predicted this war ever
+since Fremont's time, to which some of the crowd assented; he gave a
+very intelligent account of that Presidential campaign, and then
+described most impressively the secret anxiety of the slaves in
+Florida to know all about President Lincoln's election, and told how
+they all refused to work on the fourth of March, expecting their
+freedom to date from that day. He finally brought out one of the few
+really impressive appeals for the American flag that I have ever
+heard. "Our mas'rs dey hab lib under de flag, dey got dere wealth
+under it, and ebryting beautiful for dere chilen. Under it dey hab
+grind us up, and put us in dere pocket for money. But de fus' minute
+dey tink dat ole flag mean freedom for we colored people, dey pull it
+right down, and run up de rag ob dere own." (Immense applause). "But
+we'll neber desert de ole flag, boys, neber; we hab lib under it for
+eighteen hundred sixty-two years, and we'll die for it now." With
+which overpowering discharge of chronology-at-long-range, this most
+effective of stump-speeches closed. I see already with relief that
+there will be small demand in this regiment for harangues from the
+officers; give the men an empty barrel for a stump, and they will do
+their own exhortation.
+
+
+December 11, 1862.
+
+Haroun Alraschid, wandering in disguise through his imperial streets,
+scarcely happened upon a greater variety of groups than I, in my evening
+strolls among our own camp-fires.
+
+Beside some of these fires the men are cleaning their guns or
+rehearsing their drill,--beside others, smoking in silence their very
+scanty supply of the beloved tobacco,--beside others, telling stories
+and shouting with laughter over the broadest mimicry, in which they
+excel, and in which the officers come in for a full share. The
+everlasting "shout" is always within hearing, with its mixture of
+piety and polka, and its castanet-like clapping of the hands. Then
+there are quieter prayer-meetings, with pious invocations and slow
+psalms, "deaconed out" from memory by the leader, two lines at a time,
+in a sort of wailing chant. Elsewhere, there are _conversazioni_
+around fires, with a woman for queen of the circle,--her Nubian face,
+gay headdress, gilt necklace, and white teeth, all resplendent in the
+glowing light. Sometimes the woman is spelling slow monosyllables out
+of a primer, a feat which always commands all ears,--they rightly
+recognizing a mighty spell, equal to the overthrowing of monarchs, in
+the magic assonance of _cat, hat, pat, bat_, and the rest of it.
+Elsewhere, it is some solitary old cook, some aged Uncle Tiff, with
+enormous spectacles, who is perusing a hymn-book by the light of a
+pine splinter, in his deserted cooking booth of palmetto leaves. By
+another fire there is an actual dance, red-legged soldiers doing
+right-and-left, and "now-lead-de-lady-ober," to the music of a violin
+which is rather artistically played, and which may have guided the
+steps, in other days, of Barnwells and Hugers. And yonder is a
+stump-orator perched on his barrel, pouring out his exhortations to
+fidelity in war and in religion. To-night for the first time I have
+heard an harangue in a different strain, quite saucy, sceptical, and
+defiant, appealing to them in a sort of French materialistic style,
+and claiming some personal experience of warfare. "You don't know
+notin' about it, boys. You tink you's brave enough; how you tink, if
+you stan' clar in de open field,--here you, and dar de Secesh? You's
+got to hab de right ting inside o' you. You must hab it 'served
+[preserved] in you, like dese yer sour plums dey 'serve in de barr'l;
+you's got to harden it down inside o' you, or it's notin'." Then he
+hit hard at the religionists: "When a man's got de sperit ob de Lord
+in him, it weakens him all out, can't hoe de corn." He had a great
+deal of broad sense in his speech; but presently some others began
+praying vociferously close by, as if to drown this free-thinker, when
+at last he exclaimed, "I mean to fight de war through, an' die a good
+sojer wid de last kick, dat's _my_ prayer!" and suddenly jumped off
+the barrel. I was quite interested at discovering this reverse side of
+the temperament, the devotional side preponderates so enormously, and
+the greatest scamps kneel and groan in their prayer-meetings with such
+entire zest. It shows that there is some individuality developed among
+them, and that they will not become too exclusively pietistic.
+
+Their love of the spelling-book is perfectly inexhaustible,--they
+stumbling on by themselves, or the blind leading the blind, with the
+same pathetic patience which they carry into everything. The chaplain is
+getting up a schoolhouse, where he will soon teach them as regularly as
+he can. But the alphabet must always be a very incidental business in a
+camp.
+
+
+December 14.
+
+Passages from prayers in the camp:--
+
+"Let me so lib dat when I die I shall _hab manners_, dat I shall know
+what to say when I see my Heabenly Lord."
+
+"Let me lib wid de musket in one hand an' de Bible in de oder,--dat if I
+die at de muzzle ob de musket, die in de water, die on de land, I may
+know I hab de bressed Jesus in my hand, an' hab no fear."
+
+"I hab lef my wife in de land o' bondage; my little ones dey say eb'ry
+night, Whar is my fader? But when I die, when de bressed mornin' rises,
+when I shall stan' in de glory, wid one foot on de water an' one foot on
+de land, den, O Lord, I shall see my wife an' my little chil'en once more."
+
+These sentences I noted down, as best I could, beside the glimmering
+camp-fire last night. The same person was the hero of a singular
+little _contre-temps_ at a funeral in the afternoon. It was our first
+funeral. The man had died in hospital, and we had chosen a
+picturesque burial-place above the river, near the old church, and
+beside a little nameless cemetery, used by generations of slaves. It
+was a regular military funeral, the coffin being draped with the
+American flag, the escort marching behind, and three volleys fired
+over the grave. During the services there was singing, the chaplain
+deaconing out the hymn in their favorite way. This ended, he announced
+his text,--"This poor man cried, and the Lord heard him, and delivered
+him out of all his trouble." Instantly, to my great amazement, the
+cracked voice of the chorister was uplifted, intoning the text, as if
+it were the first verse of another hymn. So calmly was it done, so
+imperturbable were all the black countenances, that I half began to
+conjecture that the chaplain himself intended it for a hymn, though I
+could imagine no propsective rhyme for _trouble_ unless it were
+approximated by _debbil_, which is, indeed, a favorite reference, both
+with the men and with his Reverence. But the chaplain, peacefully
+awaiting, gently repeated his text after the chant, and to my great
+relief the old chorister waived all further recitative, and let the
+funeral discourse proceed.
+
+Their memories are a vast bewildered chaos of Jewish history and
+biography; and most of the great events of the past, down to the period
+of the American Revolution, they instinctively attribute to Moses. There
+is a fine bold confidence in all their citations, however, and the
+record never loses piquancy in their hands, though strict accuracy may
+suffer. Thus, one of my captains, last Sunday, heard a colored exhorter
+at Beaufort proclaim, "Paul may plant, _and may polish wid water_, but
+it won't do," in which the sainted Apollos would hardly have recognized
+himself.
+
+Just now one of the soldiers came to me to say that he was about to be
+married to a girl in Beaufort, and would I lend him a dollar and
+seventy-five cents to buy the wedding outfit? It seemed as if matrimony
+on such moderate terms ought to be encouraged in these days; and so I
+responded to the appeal.
+
+
+December 16.
+
+To-day a young recruit appeared here, who had been the slave of Colonel
+Sammis, one of the leading Florida refugees. Two white companions came
+with him, who also appeared to be retainers of the Colonel, and I asked
+them to dine. Being likewise refugees, they had stories to tell, and
+were quite agreeable: one was English born, the other Floridian, a dark,
+sallow Southerner, very well bred. After they had gone, the Colonel
+himself appeared, I told him that I had been entertaining his white
+friends, and after a while he quietly let out the remark,--
+
+"Yes, one of those white friends of whom you speak is a boy raised on
+one of my plantations; he has travelled with me to the North, and passed
+for white, and he always keeps away from the negroes."
+
+Certainly no such suspicion had ever crossed my mind.
+
+I have noticed one man in the regiment who would easily pass for
+white,--a little sickly drummer, aged fifty at least, with brown eyes
+and reddish hair, who is said to be the son of one of our commodores.
+I have seen perhaps a dozen persons as fair, or fairer, among fugitive
+slaves, but they were usually young children. It touched me far more
+to see this man, who had spent more than half a lifetime in this low
+estate, and for whom it now seemed too late to be anything but a
+"nigger." This offensive word, by the way, is almost as common with
+them as at the North, and far more common than with well-bred
+slaveholders. They have meekly accepted it. "Want to go out to de
+nigger houses, Sah," is the universal impulse of sociability, when
+they wish to cross the lines. "He hab twenty house-servants, an' two
+hundred head o' nigger," is a still more degrading form of phrase, in
+which the epithet is limited to the field-hands, and they estimated
+like so many cattle. This want of self-respect of course interferes
+with the authority of the non-commissioned officers, which is always
+difficult to sustain, even in white regiments. "He needn't try to play
+de white man ober me," was the protest of a soldier against his
+corporal the other day. To counteract this I have often to remind them
+that they do not obey their officers because they are white, but
+because they are their officers; and guard duty is an admirable school
+for this, because they readily understand that the sergeant or
+corporal of the guard has for the time more authority than any
+commissioned officer who is not on duty. It is necessary also for
+their superiors to treat the non-commissioned officers with careful
+courtesy, and I often caution the line officers never to call them
+"Sam" or "Will," nor omit the proper handle to their names. The value
+of the habitual courtesies of the regular army is exceedingly apparent
+with these men: an officer of polished manners can wind them round his
+finger, while white soldiers seem rather to prefer a certain
+roughness. The demeanor of my men to each other is very courteous, and
+yet I see none of that sort of upstart conceit which is sometimes
+offensive among free negroes at the North, the dandy-barber strut.
+This is an agreeable surprise, for I feared that freedom and
+regimentals would produce precisely that.
+
+They seem the world's perpetual children, docile, gay, and lovable, in
+the midst of this war for freedom on which they have intelligently
+entered. Last night, before "taps," there was the greatest noise in camp
+that I had ever heard, and I feared some riot. On going out, I found the
+most tumultuous sham-fight proceeding in total darkness, two companies
+playing like boys, beating tin cups for drums. When some of them saw me
+they seemed a little dismayed, and came and said, beseechingly,--"Gunnel,
+Sah, you hab no objection to we playin', Sah?"--which objection I
+disclaimed; but soon they all subsided, rather to my regret, and
+scattered merrily. Afterward I found that some other officer had told
+them that I considered the affair too noisy, so that I felt a mild
+self-reproach when one said, "Cunnel, wish you had let we play a little
+longer, Sah." Still I was not sorry, on the whole; for these sham-fights
+between companies would in some regiments lead to real ones, and there
+is a latent jealousy here between the Florida and South Carolina men,
+which sometimes makes me anxious.
+
+The officers are more kind and patient with the men than I should
+expect, since the former are mostly young, and drilling tries the
+temper; but they are aided by hearty satisfaction in the results
+already attained. I have never yet heard a doubt expressed among the
+officers as to the _superiority_ of these men to white troops in
+aptitude for drill and discipline, because of their imitativeness and
+docility, and the pride they take in the service. One captain said to
+me to-day, "I have this afternoon taught my men to load-in-nine-times,
+and they do it better than we did it in my former company in three
+months." I can personally testify that one of our best lieutenants, an
+Englishman, taught a part of his company the essential movements of
+the "school for skirmishers" in a single lesson of two hours, so that
+they did them very passably, though I feel bound to discourage such
+haste. However, I "formed square" on the third battalion drill. Three
+fourths of drill consist of attention, imitation, and a good ear for
+time; in the other fourth, which consists of the application of
+principles, as, for instance, performing by the left flank some
+movement before learned by the right, they are perhaps slower than
+better educated men. Having belonged to five different drill-clubs
+before entering the army, I certainly ought to know something of the
+resources of human awkwardness, and I can honestly say that they
+astonish me by the facility with which they do things. I expected much
+harder work in this respect.
+
+The habit of carrying burdens on the head gives them erectness of
+figure, even where physically disabled. I have seen a woman, with a
+brimming water-pail balanced on her head, or perhaps a cup, saucer, and
+spoon, stop suddenly, turn round, stoop to pick up a missile, rise
+again, fling it, light a pipe, and go through many evolutions with
+either hand or both, without spilling a drop. The pipe, by the way,
+gives an odd look to a well-dressed young girl on Sunday, but one often
+sees that spectacle. The passion for tobacco among our men continues
+quite absorbing, and I have piteous appeals for some arrangement by
+which they can buy it on credit, as we have yet no sutler. Their
+imploring, "Cunnel, we can't _lib_ widout it, Sah," goes to my heart;
+and as they cannot read, I cannot even have the melancholy satisfaction
+of supplying them with the excellent anti-tobacco tracts of Mr. Trask.
+
+
+December 19.
+
+Last night the water froze in the adjutant's tent, but not in mine.
+To-day has been mild and beautiful. The blacks say they do not feel
+the cold so much as the white officers do, and perhaps it is so,
+though their health evidently suffers more from dampness. On the other
+hand, while drilling on very warm days, they have seemed to suffer
+more from the heat than their officers. But they dearly love fire, and
+at night will always have it, if possible, even on the minutest
+scale,--a mere handful of splinters, that seems hardly more
+efficacious than a friction-match. Probably this is a natural habit
+for the short-lived coolness of an out-door country; and then there is
+something delightful in this rich pine, which burns like a tar-barrel.
+It was, perhaps, encouraged by the masters, as the only cheap luxury
+the slaves had at hand.
+
+As one grows more acquainted with the men, their individualities emerge;
+and I find, first their faces, then their characters, to be as distinct
+as those of whites. It is very interesting the desire they show to do
+their duty, and to improve as soldiers; they evidently think about it,
+and see the importance of the thing; they say to me that we white men
+cannot stay and be their leaders always and that they must learn to
+depend on themselves, or else relapse into their former condition.
+
+Beside the superb branch of uneatable bitter oranges which decks my
+tent-pole, I have to-day hung up a long bough of finger-sponge, which
+floated to the river-bank. As winter advances, butterflies gradually
+disappear: one species (a _Vanessa_) lingers; three others have vanished
+since I came. Mocking-birds are abundant, but rarely sing; once or twice
+they have reminded me of the red thrush, but are inferior, as I have
+always thought. The colored people all say that it will be much cooler;
+but my officers do not think so, perhaps because last winter was so
+unusually mild,--with only one frost, they say.
+
+
+December 20.
+
+Philoprogenitiveness is an important organ for an officer of colored
+troops; and I happen to be well provided with it. It seems to be the
+theory of all military usages, in fact, that soldiers are to be treated
+like children; and these singular persons, who never know their own age
+till they are past middle life, and then choose a birthday with such
+precision,--"Fifty year old, Sah, de fus' last April,"--prolong the
+privilege of childhood.
+
+I am perplexed nightly for countersigns,--their range of proper names
+is so distressingly limited, and they make such amazing work of every
+new one. At first, to be sure, they did not quite recognize the need
+of any variation: one night some officer asked a sentinel whether he
+had the countersign yet, and was indignantly answered, "Should tink I
+hab 'em, hab 'em for a fortnight"; which seems a long epoch for that
+magic word to hold out. To-night I thought I would have
+"Fredericksburg," in honor of Burnside's reported victory, using the
+rumor quickly, for fear of a contradiction. Later, in comes a
+captain, gets the countersign for his own use, but presently returns,
+the sentinel having pronounced it incorrect. On inquiry, it appears
+that the sergeant of the guard, being weak in geography, thought best
+to substitute the more familiar word, "Crockery-ware"; which was, with
+perfect gravity, confided to all the sentinels, and accepted without
+question. O life! what is the fun of fiction beside thee?
+
+I should think they would suffer and complain these cold nights; but
+they say nothing, though there is a good deal of coughing. I should
+fancy that the scarlet trousers must do something to keep them warm, and
+wonder that they dislike them so much, when they are so much like their
+beloved fires. They certainly multiply firelight in any case. I often
+notice that an infinitesimal flame, with one soldier standing by it,
+looks like quite a respectable conflagration, and it seems as if a group
+of them must dispel dampness.
+
+
+December 21.
+
+To a regimental commander no book can be so fascinating as the
+consolidated Morning Report, which is ready about nine, and tells how
+many in each company are sick, absent, on duty, and so on. It is one's
+newspaper and daily mail; I never grow tired of it. If a single recruit
+has come in, I am always eager to see how he looks on paper.
+
+To-night the officers are rather depressed by rumors of Burnside's being
+defeated, after all. I am fortunately equable and undepressible; and it
+is very convenient that the men know too little of the events of the war
+to feel excitement or fear. They know General Saxton and me,--"de
+General" and "de Gunnel,"--and seem to ask no further questions. We are
+the war. It saves a great deal of trouble, while it lasts, this
+childlike confidence; nevertheless, it is our business to educate them
+to manhood, and I see as yet no obstacle.
+
+As for the rumor, the world will no doubt roll round, whether Burnside
+is defeated or succeeds.
+
+
+Christmas Day.
+
+ "We'll fight for liberty
+ Till de Lord shall call us home;
+ We'll soon be free
+ Till de Lord shall call us home."
+
+This is the hymn which the slaves at Georgetown, South Carolina, were
+whipped for singing when President Lincoln was elected. So said a little
+drummer-boy, as he sat at my tent's edge last night and told me his
+story; and he showed all his white teeth as he added, "Dey tink _'de
+Lord'_ meant for say de Yankees."
+
+Last night, at dress-parade, the adjutant read General Saxton's
+Proclamation for the New Year's Celebration. I think they understood it,
+for there was cheering in all the company-streets afterwards. Christmas
+is the great festival of the year for this people; but, with New Year's
+coming after, we could have no adequate programme for to-day, and so
+celebrated Christmas Eve with pattern simplicity. We omitted, namely,
+the mystic curfew which we call "taps," and let them sit up and burn
+their fires, and have their little prayer-meetings as late as they
+desired; and all night, as I waked at intervals, I could hear them
+praying and "shouting" and clattering with hands and heels. It seemed to
+make them very happy, and appeared to be at least an innocent Christmas
+dissipation, as compared with some of the convivialities of the
+"superior race" hereabouts.
+
+
+December 26.
+
+The day passed with no greater excitement for the men than
+target-shooting, which they enjoyed. I had the private delight of the
+arrival of our much-desired surgeon and his nephew, the captain, with
+letters and news from home. They also bring the good tidings that
+General Saxton is not to be removed, as had been reported.
+
+Two different stands of colors have arrived for us, and will be
+presented at New Year's,--one from friends in New York, and the other
+from a lady in Connecticut. I see that "Frank Leslie's Illustrated
+Weekly" of December 20th has a highly imaginative picture of the
+muster-in of our first company, and also of a skirmish on the late
+expedition.
+
+I must not forget the prayer overheard last night by one of the
+captains: "O Lord! when I tink ob dis Kismas and las' year de Kismas.
+Las' Kismas he in de Secesh, and notin' to eat but grits, and no salt in
+'em. Dis year in de camp, and too much victual!" This "too much" is a
+favorite phrase out of their grateful hearts, and did not in this case
+denote an excess of dinner,--as might be supposed,--but of thanksgiving.
+
+
+December 29.
+
+Our new surgeon has begun his work most efficiently: he and the chaplain
+have converted an old gin-house into a comfortable hospital, with ten
+nice beds and straw pallets. He is now, with a hearty professional
+faith, looking round for somebody to put into it. I am afraid the
+regiment will accommodate him; for, although he declares that these men
+do not sham sickness, as he expected, their catarrh is an unpleasant
+reality. They feel the dampness very much, and make such a coughing at
+dress-parade, that I have urged him to administer a dose of
+cough-mixture, all round, just before that pageant. Are the colored race
+_tough?_ is my present anxiety; and it is odd that physical
+insufficiency, the only discouragement not thrown in our way by the
+newspapers, is the only discouragement which finds any place in our
+minds. They are used to sleeping indoors in winter, herded before fires,
+and so they feel the change. Still, the regiment is as healthy as the
+average, and experience will teach us something.*
+
+* A second winter's experience removed all this solicitude, for they
+learned to take care of themselves. During the first February the
+sick-list averaged about ninety, during the second about thirty,
+this being the worst month in the year for blacks.
+
+
+December 30.
+
+On the first of January we are to have a slight collation, ten oxen or
+so, barbecued,--or not properly barbecued, but roasted whole. Touching
+the length of time required to "do" an ox, no two housekeepers appear to
+agree. Accounts vary from two hours to twenty-four. We shall happily
+have enough to try all gradations of roasting, and suit all tastes, from
+Miss A.'s to mine. But fancy me proffering a spare-rib, well done, to
+some fair lady! What ever are we to do for spoons and forks and plates?
+Each soldier has his own, and is sternly held responsible for it by
+"Army Regulations." But how provide for the multitude? Is it customary,
+I ask you, to help to tenderloin with one's fingers? Fortunately, the
+Major is to see to that department. Great are the advantages of military
+discipline: for anything perplexing, detail a subordinate.
+
+
+New Year's Eve.
+
+My housekeeping at home is not, perhaps, on any very extravagant scale.
+Buying beefsteak, I usually go to the extent of two or three pounds. Yet
+when, this morning at daybreak, the quartermaster called to inquire how
+many cattle I would have killed for roasting, I turned over in bed, and
+answered composedly, "Ten,--and keep three to be fatted."
+
+Fatted, quotha! Not one of the beasts at present appears to possess an
+ounce of superfluous flesh. Never were seen such lean kine. As they
+swing on vast spits, composed of young trees, the firelight glimmers
+through their ribs, as if they were great lanterns. But no matter, they
+are cooking,--nay, they are cooked.
+
+One at least is taken off to cool, and will be replaced tomorrow to
+warm up. It was roasted three hours, and well done, for I tasted it.
+It is so long since I tasted fresh beef that forgetfulness is
+possible; but I fancied this to be successful. I tried to imagine that
+I liked the Homeric repast, and certainly the whole thing has been far
+more agreeable than was to be expected. The doubt now is, whether I
+have made a sufficient provision for my household. I should have
+roughly guessed that ten beeves would feed as many million people, it
+has such a stupendous sound; but General Saxton predicts a small
+social party of five thousand, and we fear that meat will run short,
+unless they prefer bone. One of the cattle is so small, we are hoping
+it may turn out veal.
+
+For drink we aim at the simple luxury of molasses-and-water, a barrel
+per company, ten in all. Liberal housekeepers may like to know that for
+a barrel of water we allow three gallons of molasses, half a pound of
+ginger, and a quart of vinegar,--this last being a new ingredient for my
+untutored palate, though all the rest are amazed at my ignorance. Hard
+bread, with more molasses, and a dessert of tobacco, complete the
+festive repast, destined to cheer, but not inebriate.
+
+On this last point, of inebriation, this is certainly a wonderful camp.
+For us it is absolutely omitted from the list of vices. I have never
+heard of a glass of liquor in the camp, nor of any effort either to
+bring it in or to keep it out. A total absence of the circulating medium
+might explain the abstinence,--not that it seems to have that effect with
+white soldiers,--but it would not explain the silence. The craving for
+tobacco is constant, and not to be allayed, like that of a mother for
+her children; but I have never heard whiskey even wished for, save on
+Christmas-Day, and then only by one man, and he spoke with a hopeless
+ideal sighing, as one alludes to the Golden Age. I am amazed at this
+total omission of the most inconvenient of all camp appetites. It
+certainly is not the result of exhortation, for there has been no
+occasion for any, and even the pledge would scarcely seem efficacious
+where hardly anybody can write.
+
+I do not think there is a great visible eagerness for tomorrow's
+festival: it is not their way to be very jubilant over anything this
+side of the New Jerusalem. They know also that those in this Department
+are nominally free already, and that the practical freedom has to be
+maintained, in any event, by military success. But they will enjoy it
+greatly, and we shall have a multitude of people.
+
+
+January 1, 1863 (evening).
+
+A happy New Year to civilized people,--mere white folks. Our festival
+has come and gone, with perfect success, and our good General has been
+altogether satisfied. Last night the great fires were kept smouldering
+in the pit, and the beeves were cooked more or less, chiefly
+more,--during which time they had to be carefully watched, and the
+great spits turned by main force. Happy were the merry fellows who
+were permitted to sit up all night, and watch the glimmering flames
+that threw a thousand fantastic shadows among the great gnarled oaks.
+And such a chattering as I was sure to hear whenever I awoke that
+night!
+
+My first greeting to-day was from one of the most stylish sergeants, who
+approached me with the following little speech, evidently the result of
+some elaboration:--
+
+"I tink myself happy, dis New Year's Day, for salute my own Cunnel. Dis
+day las' year I was servant to a Gunnel ob Secesh; but now I hab de
+privilege for salute my own Cunnel."
+
+That officer, with the utmost sincerity, reciprocated the sentiment.
+
+About ten o'clock the people began to collect by land, and also by
+water,--in steamers sent by General Saxton for the purpose; and from that
+time all the avenues of approach were thronged. The multitude were
+chiefly colored women, with gay handkerchiefs on their heads, and a
+sprinkling of men, with that peculiarly respectable look which these
+people always have on Sundays and holidays. There were many white
+visitors also,--ladies on horseback and in carriages, superintendents and
+teachers, officers, and cavalry-men. Our companies were marched to the
+neighborhood of the platform, and allowed to sit or stand, as at the
+Sunday services; the platform was occupied by ladies and dignitaries,
+and by the band of the Eighth Maine, which kindly volunteered for the
+occasion; the colored people filled up all the vacant openings in the
+beautiful grove around, and there was a cordon of mounted visitors
+beyond. Above, the great live-oak branches and their trailing moss;
+beyond the people, a glimpse of the blue river.
+
+The services began at half past eleven o'clock, with prayer by our
+chaplain, Mr. Fowler, who is always, on such occasions, simple,
+reverential, and impressive. Then the President's Proclamation was
+read by Dr. W. H. Brisbane, a thing infinitely appropriate, a South
+Carolinian addressing South Carolinians; for he was reared among these
+very islands, and here long since emancipated his own slaves. Then the
+colors were presented to us by the Rev. Mr. French, a chaplain who
+brought them from the donors in New York. All this was according to
+the programme. Then followed an incident so simple, so touching, so
+utterly unexpected and startling, that I can scarcely believe it on
+recalling, though it gave the keynote to the whole day. The very
+moment the speaker had ceased, and just as I took and waved the flag,
+which now for the first time meant anything to these poor people,
+there suddenly arose, close beside the platform, a strong male voice
+(but rather cracked and elderly), into which two women's voices
+instantly blended, singing, as if by an impulse that could no more be
+repressed than the morning note of the song-sparrow.--
+
+ "My Country, 'tis of thee,
+ Sweet land of liberty,
+ Of thee I sing!"
+
+People looked at each other, and then at us on the platform, to see
+whence came this interruption, not set down in the bills. Firmly and
+irrepressibly the quavering voices sang on, verse after verse; others
+of the colored people joined in; some whites on the platform began,
+but I motioned them to silence. I never saw anything so electric; it
+made all other words cheap; it seemed the choked voice of a race at
+last unloosed. Nothing could be more wonderfully unconscious; art
+could not have dreamed of a tribute to the day of jubilee that should
+be so affecting; history will not believe it; and when I came to speak
+of it, after it was ended, tears were everywhere. If you could have
+heard how quaint and innocent it was! Old Tiff and his children might
+have sung it; and close before me was a little slave-boy, almost
+white, who seemed to belong to the party, and even he must join in.
+Just think of it!--the first day they had ever had a country, the
+first flag they had ever seen which promised anything to their people,
+and here, while mere spectators stood in silence, waiting for my
+stupid words, these simple souls burst out in their lay, as if they
+were by their own hearths at home! When they stopped, there was
+nothing to do for it but to speak, and I went on; but the life of the
+whole day was in those unknown people's song.
+
+Receiving the flags, I gave them into the hands of two fine-looking men,
+jet black, as color-guard, and they also spoke, and very
+effectively,--Sergeant Prince Rivers and Corporal Robert Sutton. The
+regiment sang "Marching Along," and then General Saxton spoke, in his
+own simple, manly way, and Mrs. Francis D. Gage spoke very sensibly to
+the women, and Judge Stickney, from Florida, added something; then some
+gentleman sang an ode, and the regiment the John Brown song, and then
+they went to their beef and molasses. Everything was very orderly, and
+they seemed to have a very gay time. Most of the visitors had far to
+go, and so dispersed before dress-parade, though the band stayed to
+enliven it. In the evening we had letters from home, and General Saxton
+had a reception at his house, from which I excused myself; and so ended
+one of the most enthusiastic and happy gatherings I ever knew. The day
+was perfect, and there was nothing but success.
+
+I forgot to say, that, in the midst of the services, it was announced
+that General Fremont was appointed Commander-in-Chief,--an announcement
+which was received with immense cheering, as would have been almost
+anything else, I verily believe, at that moment of high tide. It was
+shouted across by the pickets above,--a way in which we often receive
+news, but not always trustworthy.
+
+
+January 3, 1863.
+
+Once, and once only, thus far, the water has frozen in my tent; and
+the next morning showed a dense white frost outside. We have still
+mocking-birds and crickets and rosebuds, and occasional noonday baths
+in the river, though the butterflies have vanished, as I remember to
+have observed in Fayal, after December. I have been here nearly six
+weeks without a rainy day; one or two slight showers there have been,
+once interrupting a drill, but never dress-parade. For climate, by
+day, we might be among the isles of Greece,--though it may be my
+constant familiarity with the names of her sages which suggests that
+impression. For instance, a voice just now called, near my
+tent,--"Cato, whar's Plato?" The men have somehow got the impression
+that it is essential to the validity of a marriage that they should
+come to me for permission, just as they used to go to the master; and
+I rather encourage these little confidences, because it is so
+entertaining to hear them. "Now, Cunnel," said a faltering swam the
+other day, "I want for get me one good lady," which I approved,
+especially the limitation as to number. Afterwards I asked one of the
+bridegroom's friends whether he thought it a good match. "O yes,
+Cunnel," said he, in all the cordiality of friendship, "John's gwine
+for marry Venus." I trust the goddess will prove herself a better lady
+than she appeared during her previous career upon this planet. But
+this naturally suggests the isles of Greece again.
+
+
+January 7.
+
+On first arriving, I found a good deal of anxiety among the officers as
+to the increase of desertions, that being the rock on which the "Hunter
+Regiment" split. Now this evil is very nearly stopped, and we are every
+day recovering the older absentees. One of the very best things that
+have happened to us was the half-accidental shooting of a man who had
+escaped from the guard-house, and was wounded by a squad sent in
+pursuit. He has since died; and this very eve-rung another man, who
+escaped with him, came and opened the door of my tent, after being five
+days in the woods, almost without food. His clothes were in rags, and he
+was nearly starved, poor foolish fellow, so that we can almost dispense
+with further punishment. Severe penalties would be wasted on these
+people, accustomed as they have been to the most violent passions on the
+part of white men; but a mild inexorableness tells on them, just as it
+does on any other children. It is something utterly new to me, and it is
+thus far perfectly efficacious. They have a great deal of pride as
+soldiers, and a very little of severity goes a great way, if it be firm
+and consistent. This is very encouraging.
+
+The single question which I asked of some of the plantation
+superintendents, on the voyage, was, "Do these people appreciate
+_justice_?" If they did it was evident that all the rest would be easy.
+When a race is degraded beyond that point it must be very hard to deal
+with them; they must mistake all kindness for indulgence, all strictness
+for cruelty. With these freed slaves there is no such trouble, not a
+particle: let an officer be only just and firm, with a cordial, kindly
+nature, and he has no sort of difficulty. The plantation superintendents
+and teachers have the same experience, they say; but we have an immense
+advantage in the military organization, which helps in two ways: it
+increases their self-respect, and it gives us an admirable machinery for
+discipline, thus improving both the fulcrum and the lever.
+
+The wounded man died in the hospital, and the general verdict seemed to
+be, "Him brought it on heself." Another soldier died of pneumonia on the
+same day, and we had the funerals in the evening. It was very
+impressive. A dense mist came up, with a moon behind it, and we had only
+the light of pine-splinters, as the procession wound along beneath the
+mighty, moss-hung branches of the ancient grove. The groups around the
+grave, the dark faces, the red garments, the scattered lights, the misty
+boughs, were weird and strange. The men sang one of their own wild
+chants. Two crickets sang also, one on either side, and did not cease
+their little monotone, even when the three volleys were fired above the
+graves. Just before the coffins were lowerd, an old man whispered to me
+that I must have their position altered,--the heads must be towards the
+west; so it was done,--though they are in a place so veiled in woods that
+either rising or setting sun will find it hard to spy them.
+
+We have now a good regimental hospital, admirably arranged in a deserted
+gin-house,--a fine well of our own digging, within the camp lines,--a full
+allowance of tents, all floored,--a wooden cook-house to every company,
+with sometimes a palmetto mess-house beside,--a substantial wooden
+guard-house, with a fireplace five feet "in de clar," where the men off
+duty can dry themselves and sleep comfortably in bunks afterwards. We
+have also a great circular school-tent, made of condemned canvas, thirty
+feet in diameter, and looking like some of the Indian lodges I saw in
+Kansas. We now meditate a regimental bakery. Our aggregate has increased
+from four hundred and ninety to seven hundred and forty, besides a
+hundred recruits now waiting at St. Augustine, and we have practised
+through all the main movements in battalion drill.
+
+Affairs being thus prosperous, and yesterday having been six weeks since
+my last and only visit to Beaufort, I rode in, glanced at several camps,
+and dined with the General. It seemed absolutely like re-entering the
+world; and I did not fully estimate my past seclusion till it occurred
+to me, as a strange and novel phenomenon, that the soldiers at the other
+camps were white.
+
+
+January 8.
+
+This morning I went to Beaufort again, on necessary business, and by
+good luck happened upon a review and drill of the white regiments. The
+thing that struck me most was that same absence of uniformity, in minor
+points, that I noticed at first in my own officers. The best regiments
+in the Department are represented among my captains and lieutenants, and
+very well represented too; yet it has cost much labor to bring them to
+any uniformity in their drill. There is no need of this; for the
+prescribed "Tactics" approach perfection; it is never left discretionary
+in what place an officer shall stand, or in what words he shall give his
+order. All variation would seem to imply negligence. Yet even West Point
+occasionally varies from the "Tactics,"--as, for instance, in requiring
+the line officers to face down the line, when each is giving the order
+to his company. In our strictest Massachusetts regiments this is not done.
+
+It needs an artist's eye to make a perfect drill-master. Yet the small
+points are not merely a matter of punctilio; for, the more perfectly a
+battalion is drilled on the parade-ground the more quietly it can be
+handled in action. Moreover, the great need of uniformity is this:
+that, in the field, soldiers of different companies, and even of
+different regiments, are liable to be intermingled, and a diversity of
+orders may throw everything into confusion. Confusion means Bull Run.
+
+I wished my men at the review to-day; for, amidst all the rattling and
+noise of artillery and the galloping of cavalry, there was only one
+infantry movement that we have not practised, and that was done by only
+one regiment, and apparently considered quite a novelty, though it is
+easily taught,
+
+--forming square by Casey's method: forward on centre. It is really just
+as easy to drill a regiment as a company,
+
+--perhaps easier, because one has more time to think; but it is just as
+essential to be sharp and decisive, perfectly clearheaded, and to put
+life into the men. A regiment seems small when one has learned how to
+handle it, a mere handful of men; and I have no doubt that a brigade or
+a division would soon appear equally small. But to handle either
+_judiciously_, ah, that is another affair!
+
+So of governing; it is as easy to govern a regiment as a school or a
+factory, and needs like qualities, system, promptness, patience, tact;
+moreover, in a regiment one has the aid of the admirable machinery of
+the army, so that I see very ordinary men who succeed very tolerably.
+
+Reports of a six months' armistice are rife here, and the thought is
+deplored by all. I cannot believe it; yet sometimes one feels very
+anxious about the ultimate fate of these poor people. After the
+experience of Hungary, one sees that revolutions may go backward; and
+the habit of injustice seems so deeply impressed upon the whites, that
+it is hard to believe in the possibility of anything better. I dare not
+yet hope that the promise of the President's Proclamation will be kept.
+For myself I can be indifferent, for the experience here has been its
+own daily and hourly reward; and the adaptedness of the freed slaves for
+drill and discipline is now thoroughly demonstrated, and must soon be
+universally acknowledged. But it would be terrible to see this regiment
+disbanded or defrauded.
+
+
+January 12.
+
+Many things glide by without time to narrate them. On Saturday we had a
+mail with the President's Second Message of Emancipation, and the next
+day it was read to the men. The words themselves did not stir them very
+much, because they have been often told that they were free, especially
+on New Year's Day, and, being unversed in politics, they do not
+understand, as well as we do, the importance of each additional
+guaranty. But the chaplain spoke to them afterwards very effectively, as
+usual; and then I proposed to them to hold up their hands and pledge
+themselves to be faithful to those still in bondage. They entered
+heartily into this, and the scene was quite impressive, beneath the
+great oak-branches. I heard afterwards that only one man refused to
+raise his hand, saying bluntly that his wife was out of slavery with
+him, and he did not care to fight. The other soldiers of his company
+were very indignant, and shoved him about among them while marching back
+to their quarters, calling him "Coward." I was glad of their exhibition
+of feeling, though it is very possible that the one who had thus the
+moral courage to stand alone among his comrades might be more reliable,
+on a pinch, than some who yielded a more ready assent. But the whole
+response, on their part, was very hearty, and will be a good thing to
+which to hold them hereafter, at any time of discouragement or
+demoralization,--which was my chief reason for proposing it. With their
+simple natures it is a great thing to tie them to some definite
+committal; they never forget a marked occurrence, and never seem
+disposed to evade a pledge.
+
+It is this capacity of honor and fidelity which gives me such entire
+faith in them as soldiers. Without it all their religious
+demonstration would be mere sentimentality. For instance, every one
+who visits the camp is struck with their bearing as sentinels. They
+exhibit, in this capacity, not an upstart conceit, but a steady,
+conscientious devotion to duty. They would stop their idolized General
+Saxton, if he attempted to cross their beat contrary to orders: I have
+seen them. No feeble or incompetent race could do this. The officers
+tell many amusing instances of this fidelity, but I think mine the
+best.
+
+It was very dark the other night, an unusual thing here, and the
+rain fell in torrents; so I put on my India-rubber suit, and went the
+rounds of the sentinels, incognito, to test them. I can only say that I
+shall never try such an experiment again and have cautioned my officers
+against it. Tis a wonder I escaped with life and limb,--such a charging
+of bayonets and clicking of gun-locks. Sometimes I tempted them by
+refusing to give any countersign, but offering them a piece of tobacco,
+which they could not accept without allowing me nearer than the
+prescribed bayonet's distance. Tobacco is more than gold to them, and it
+was touching to watch the struggle in their minds; but they always did
+their duty at last, and I never could persuade them. One man, as if
+wishing to crush all his inward vacillation at one fell stroke, told me
+stoutly that he never used tobacco, though I found next day that he
+loved it as much as any one of them. It seemed wrong thus to tamper with
+their fidelity; yet it was a vital matter to me to know how far it could
+be trusted, out of my sight. It was so intensely dark that not more than
+one or two knew me, even after I had talked with the very next sentinel,
+especially as they had never seen me in India-rubber clothing, and I can
+always disguise my voice. It was easy to distinguish those who did make
+the discovery; they were always conscious and simpering when their turn
+came; while the others were stout and irreverent till I revealed myself,
+and then rather cowed and anxious, fearing to have offended.
+
+It rained harder and harder, and when I had nearly made the rounds I had
+had enough of it, and, simply giving the countersign to the challenging
+sentinel, undertook to pass within the lines.
+
+"Halt!" exclaimed this dusky man and brother, bringing down his bayonet,
+"de countersign not correck."
+
+Now the magic word, in this case, was "Vicksburg," in honor of a
+rumored victory. But as I knew that these hard names became quite
+transformed upon their lips, "Carthage" being familiarized into
+Cartridge, and "Concord" into Corn-cob, how could I possibly tell what
+shade of pronunciation my friend might prefer for this particular
+proper name?
+
+"Vicksburg," I repeated, blandly, but authoritatively, endeavoring, as
+zealously as one of Christy's Minstrels, to assimilate my speech to any
+supposed predilection of the Ethiop vocal organs.
+
+"Halt dar! Countersign not correck," was the only answer.
+
+The bayonet still maintained a position which, in a military point of
+view, was impressive.
+
+I tried persuasion, orthography, threats, tobacco, all in vain. I could
+not pass in. Of course my pride was up; for was I to defer to an
+untutored African on a point of pronunciation? Classic shades of
+Harvard, forbid! Affecting scornful indifference, I tried to edge away,
+proposing to myself to enter the camp at some other point, where my
+elocution would be better appreciated. Not a step could I stir.
+
+"Halt!" shouted my gentleman again, still holding me at his bayonet's
+point, and I wincing and halting.
+
+I explained to him the extreme absurdity of this proceeding, called his
+attention to the state of the weather, which, indeed, spoke for itself
+so loudly that we could hardly hear each other speak, and requested
+permission to withdraw. The bayonet, with mute eloquence, refused the
+application.
+
+There flashed into my mind, with more enjoyment in the retrospect than
+I had experienced at the time, an adventure on a lecturing tour in
+other years, when I had spent an hour in trying to scramble into a
+country tavern, after bed-time, on the coldest night of winter. On
+that occasion I ultimately found myself stuck midway in the window,
+with my head in a temperature of 80 degrees, and my heels in a
+temperature of -10 degrees, with a heavy windowsash pinioning the
+small of my back. However, I had got safe out of that dilemma, and it
+was time to put an end to this one,
+
+"Call the corporal of the guard," said I at last, with dignity,
+unwilling to make a night of it or to yield my incognito.
+
+"Corporal ob de guardl" he shouted, lustily,--"Post Number Two!" while I
+could hear another sentinel chuckling with laughter. This last was a
+special guard, placed over a tent, with a prisoner in charge. Presently
+he broke silence.
+
+"Who am dat?" he asked, in a stage whisper. "Am he a buckra [white man]?"
+
+"Dunno whether he been a buckra or not," responded, doggedly, my
+Cerberus in uniform; "but I's bound to keep him here till de corporal ob
+de guard come."
+
+Yet, when that dignitary arrived, and I revealed myself, poor Number Two
+appeared utterly transfixed with terror, and seemed to look for nothing
+less than immediate execution. Of course I praised his fidelity, and the
+next day complimented him before the guard, and mentioned him to his
+captain; and the whole affair was very good for them all. Hereafter, if
+Satan himself should approach them in darkness and storm, they will take
+_him_ for "de Cunnel," and treat him with special severity.
+
+
+January 13.
+
+In many ways the childish nature of this people shows itself. I have
+just had to make a change of officers in a company which has constantly
+complained, and with good reason, of neglect and improper treatment. Two
+excellent officers have been assigned to them; and yet they sent a
+deputation to me in the evening, in a state of utter wretchedness. "We's
+bery grieved dis evening, Cunnel; 'pears like we couldn't bear it, to
+lose de Cap'n and de Lieutenant, all two togeder." Argument was useless;
+and I could only fall back on the general theory, that I knew what was
+best for them, which had much more effect; and I also could cite the
+instance of another company, which had been much improved by a new
+captain, as they readily admitted. So with the promise that the new
+officers should not be "savage to we," which was the one thing they
+deprecated, I assuaged their woes. Twenty-four hours have passed, and I
+hear them singing most merrily all down that company street.
+
+I often notice how their griefs may be dispelled, like those of
+children, merely by permission to utter them: if they can tell their
+sorrows, they go away happy, even without asking to have anything done
+about them. I observe also a peculiar dislike of all _intermediate_
+control: they always wish to pass by the company officer, and deal
+with me personally for everything. General Saxton notices the same
+thing with the people on the plantations as regards himself. I suppose
+this proceeds partly from the old habit of appealing to the master
+against the overseer. Kind words would cost the master nothing, and he
+could easily put off any non-fulfilment upon the overseer. Moreover,
+the negroes have acquired such constitutional distrust of white
+people, that it is perhaps as much as they can do to trust more than
+one person at a tune. Meanwhile this constant personal intercourse is
+out of the question in a well-ordered regiment; and the remedy for it
+is to introduce by degrees more and more of system, so that their
+immediate officers will become all-sufficient for the daily routine.
+
+It is perfectly true (as I find everybody takes for granted) that the
+first essential for an officer of colored troops is to gain their
+confidence. But it is equally true, though many persons do not
+appreciate it, that the admirable methods and proprieties of the regular
+army are equally available for all troops, and that the sublimest
+philanthropist, if he does not appreciate this, is unfit to command them.
+
+Another childlike attribute in these men, which is less agreeable, is a
+sort of blunt insensibility to giving physical pain. If they are cruel
+to animals, for instance, it always reminds me of children pulling off
+flies' legs, in a sort of pitiless, untaught, experimental way. Yet I
+should not fear any wanton outrage from them. After all their wrongs,
+they are not really revengeful; and I would far rather enter a captured
+city with them than with white troops, for they would be more
+subordinate. But for mere physical suffering they would have no fine
+sympathies. The cruel things they have seen and undergone have helped to
+blunt them; and if I ordered them to put to death a dozen prisoners, I
+think they would do it without remonstrance.
+
+Yet their religious spirit grows more beautiful to me in living longer
+with them; it is certainly far more so than at first, when it seemed
+rather a matter of phrase and habit. It influences them both on the
+negative and the positive side. That is, it cultivates the feminine
+virtues first,--makes them patient, meek, resigned. This is very
+evident in the hospital; there is nothing of the restless, defiant
+habit of white invalids. Perhaps, if they had more of this, they
+would resist disease better. Imbued from childhood with the habit of
+submission, drinking in through every pore that other-world trust
+which is the one spirit of their songs, they can endure everything.
+This I expected; but I am relieved to find that their religion
+strengthens them on the positive side also,--gives zeal, energy,
+daring. They could easily be made fanatics, if I chose; but I do not
+choose. Their whole mood is essentially Mohammedan, perhaps, in its
+strength and its weakness; and I feel the same degree of sympathy that
+I should if I had a Turkish command,--that is, a sort of sympathetic
+admiration, not tending towards agreement, but towards co-operation.
+Their philosophizing is often the highest form of mysticism; and our
+dear surgeon declares that they are all natural transcendentalists.
+The white camps seem rough and secular, after this; and I hear our men
+talk about "a religious army," "a Gospel army," in their
+prayer-meetings. They are certainly evangelizing the chaplain, who was
+rather a heretic at the beginning; at least, this is his own
+admission. We have recruits on their way from St. Augustine, where the
+negroes are chiefly Roman Catholics; and it will be interesting to see
+how their type of character combines with that elder creed. It is time
+for rest; and I have just looked out into the night, where the eternal
+stars shut down, in concave protection, over the yet glimmering camp,
+and Orion hangs above my tent-door, giving to me the sense of strength
+and assurance which these simple children obtain from their Moses and
+the Prophets. Yet external Nature does its share in their training;
+witness that most poetic of all their songs, which always reminds me
+of the "Lyke-Wake Dirge" in the "Scottish Border Minstrelsy,"--
+
+ "I know moon-rise, I know star-rise;
+ Lay dis body down.
+ I walk in de moonlight, I walk in de starlight,
+ To lay dis body down.
+ I'll walk in de graveyard, I'll walk through de graveyard,
+ To lay dis body down.
+ I'll lie in de grave and stretch out my arms;
+ Lay dis body down.
+ I go to de Judgment in de evening ob de day
+ When I lay dis body down;
+ And my soul and your soul will meet in de day
+ When I lay dis body down."
+
+
+January 14.
+
+In speaking of the military qualities of the blacks, I should add, that
+the only point where I am disappointed is one I have never seen raised
+by the most incredulous newspaper critics,--namely, then- physical
+condition. To be sure they often look magnificently to my
+gymnasium-trained eye; and I always like to observe them when
+bathing,--such splendid muscular development, set off by that smooth
+coating of adipose tissue which makes them, like the South-Sea Islanders
+appear even more muscular than they are. Their skins are also of finer
+grain than those of whites, the surgeons say, and certainly are smoother
+and far more free from hair. But their weakness is pulmonary; pneumonia
+and pleurisy are their besetting ailments; they are easily made ill,--and
+easily cured, if promptly treated: childish organizations again.
+Guard-duty injures them more than whites, apparently; and double-quick
+movements, in choking dust, set them coughing badly. But then it is to
+be remembered that this is their sickly season, from January to March,
+and that their healthy season will come in summer, when the whites break
+down. Still my conviction of the physical superiority of more highly
+civilized races is strengthened on the whole, not weakened, by observing
+them. As to availability for military drill and duty in other respects,
+the only question I ever hear debated among the officers is, whether
+they are equal or superior to whites. I have never heard it suggested
+that they were inferior, although I expected frequently to hear such
+complaints from hasty or unsuccessful officers.
+
+Of one thing I am sure, that their best qualities will be wasted by
+merely keeping them for garrison duty. They seem peculiarly fitted for
+offensive operations, and especially for partisan warfare; they have
+so much dash and such abundant resources, combined with such an
+Indian-like knowledge of the country and its ways. These traits have
+been often illustrated in expeditions sent after deserters. For
+instance, I despatched one of my best lieutenants and my best sergeant
+with a squad of men to search a certain plantation, where there were
+two separate negro villages. They went by night, and the force was
+divided. The lieutenant took one set of huts, the sergeant the other.
+Before the lieutenant had reached his first house, every man in the
+village was in the woods, innocent and guilty alike. But the
+sergeant's mode of operation was thus described by a corporal from a
+white regiment who happened to be in one of the negro houses. He said
+that not a sound was heard until suddenly a red leg appeared in the
+open doorway, and a voice outside said, "Rally." Going to the door, he
+observed a similar pair of red legs before every hut, and not a person
+was allowed to go out, until the quarters had been thoroughly
+searched, and the three deserters found. This was managed by Sergeant
+Prince Rivers, our color-sergeant, who is provost-sergeant also, and
+has entire charge of the prisoners and of the daily policing of the
+camp. He is a man of distinguished appearance, and in old times was
+the crack coachman of Beaufort, in which capacity he once drove
+Beauregard from this plantation to Charleston, I believe. They tell me
+that he was once allowed to present a petition to the Governor of
+South Carolina in behalf of slaves, for the redress of certain
+grievances; and that a placard, offering two thousand dollars for his
+recapture, is still to be seen by the wayside between here and
+Charleston. He was a sergeant in the old "Hunter Regiment," and was
+taken by General Hunter to New York last spring, where the _chevrons_
+on his arm brought a mob upon him in Broadway, whom he kept off till
+the police interfered. There is not a white officer in this regiment
+who has more administrative ability, or more absolute authority over
+the men; they do not love him, but his mere presence has controlling
+power over them. He writes well enough to prepare for me a daily
+report of his duties in the camp; if his education reached a higher
+point, I see no reason why he should not command the Army of the
+Potomac. He is jet-black, or rather, I should say, _wine-black_; his
+complexion, like that of others of my darkest men, having a sort of
+rich, clear depth, without a trace of sootiness, and to my eye very
+handsome. His features are tolerably regular, and full of command, and
+his figure superior to that of any of our white officers,--being six
+feet high, perfectly proportioned, and of apparently inexhaustible
+strength and activity. His gait is like a panther's; I never saw such
+a tread. No anti-slavery novel has described a man of such marked
+ability. He makes Toussaint perfectly intelligible; and if there
+should ever be a black monarchy in South Carolina, he will be its
+king.
+
+
+January 15.
+
+This morning is like May. Yesterday I saw bluebirds and a butterfly; so
+this whiter of a fortnight is over. I fancy there is a trifle less
+coughing in the camp. We hear of other stations in the Department where
+the mortality, chiefly from yellow fever, has been frightful. Dr. ---- is
+rubbing his hands professionally over the fearful tales of the surgeon
+of a New York regiment, just from Key West, who has had two hundred
+cases of the fever. "I suppose he is a skilful, highly educated man,"
+said I. "Yes," he responded with enthusiasm. "Why, he had seventy
+deaths!"--as if that proved his superiority past question.
+
+
+January 19.
+
+"And first, sitting proud as a lung on his throne, At the head of them
+all rode Sir Richard Tyrone."
+
+But I fancy that Sir Richard felt not much better satisfied with his
+following than I to-day. J. R. L. said once that nothing was quite so
+good as turtle-soup, except mock-turtle; and I have heard officers
+declare that nothing was so stirring as real war, except some exciting
+parade. To-day, for the first time, I marched the whole regiment
+through Beaufort and back,--the first appearance of such a novelty on
+any stage. They did march splendidly; this all admit. M----'s
+prediction was fulfilled: "Will not ---- be in bliss? A thousand men,
+every one as black as a coal!" I confess it. To look back on twenty
+broad double-ranks of men (for they marched by platoons),--every
+polished musket having a black face beside it, and every face set
+steadily to the front,--a regiment of freed slaves marching on into
+the future,--it was something to remember; and when they returned
+through the same streets, marching by the flank, with guns at a
+"support," and each man covering his file-leader handsomely, the
+effect on the eye was almost as fine. The band of the Eighth Maine
+joined us at the entrance of the town, and escorted us in. Sergeant
+Rivers said ecstatically afterwards, in describing the affair, "And
+when dat band wheel in before us, and march on,--my God! I quit dis
+world altogeder." I wonder if he pictured to himself the many dusky
+regiments, now unformed, which I seemed to see marching up behind us,
+gathering shape out of the dim air.
+
+I had cautioned the men, before leaving camp, not to be staring about
+them as they marched, but to look straight to the front, every man; and
+they did it with their accustomed fidelity, aided by the sort of
+spontaneous eye-for-effect which is in all their melodramatic natures.
+One of them was heard to say exultingly afterwards, "We didn't look to
+de right nor to de leff. I didn't see notin' in Beaufort. Eb'ry step was
+worth a half a dollar." And they all marched as if it were so. They knew
+well that they were marching through throngs of officers and soldiers
+who had drilled as many months as we had drilled weeks, and whose eyes
+would readily spy out every defect. And I must say, that, on the whole,
+with a few trivial exceptions, those spectators behaved in a manly and
+courteous manner, and I do not care to write down all the handsome
+things that were said. Whether said or not, they were deserved; and
+there is no danger that our men will not take sufficient satisfaction in
+their good appearance. I was especially amused at one of our recruits,
+who did not march in the ranks, and who said, after watching the
+astonishment of some white soldiers, "De buckra sojers look like a man
+who been-a-steal a sheep,"--that is, I suppose, sheepish.
+
+After passing and repassing through the town, we marched to the
+parade-ground, and went through an hour's drill, forming squares and
+reducing them, and doing other things which look hard on paper, and
+are perfectly easy in fact; and we were to have been reviewed by
+General Saxton, but he had been unexpectedly called to Ladies Island,
+and did not see us at all, which was the only thing to mar the men's
+enjoyment. Then we marched back to camp (three miles), the men singing
+the "John Brown Song," and all manner of things,--as happy creatures
+as one can well conceive.
+
+It is worth mentioning, before I close, that we have just received an
+article about "Negro Troops," from the _London Spectator_, which is so
+admirably true to our experience that it seems as if written by one of
+us. I am confident that there never has been, in any American newspaper,
+a treatment of the subject so discriminating and so wise.
+
+
+January 21.
+
+To-day brought a visit from Major-General Hunter and his staff, by
+General Saxton's invitation,--the former having just arrived in the
+Department. I expected them at dress-parade, but they came during
+battalion drill, rather to my dismay, and we were caught in our old
+clothes. It was our first review, and I dare say we did tolerably; but
+of course it seemed to me that the men never appeared so ill before,--
+just as one always thinks a party at one's own house a failure, even if
+the guests seem to enjoy it, because one is so keenly sensitive to every
+little thing that goes wrong. After review and drill, General Hunter
+made the men a little speech, at my request, and told them that he
+wished there were fifty thousand of them. General Saxton spoke to them
+afterwards, and said that fifty thousand muskets were on their way for
+colored troops. The men cheered both the generals lustily; and they were
+complimentary afterwards, though I knew that the regiment could not have
+appeared nearly so well as on its visit to Beaufort. I suppose I felt
+like some anxious mamma whose children have accidentally appeared at
+dancing-school in their old clothes.
+
+General Hunter promises us all we want,--pay when the funds arrive,
+Springfield rifled muskets, and blue trousers. Moreover, he has
+graciously consented that we should go on an expedition along the
+coast, to pick up cotton, lumber, and, above all, recruits. I declined
+an offer like this just after my arrival, because the regiment was not
+drilled or disciplined, not even the officers; but it is all we wish
+for now.
+
+ "What care I how black I be?
+ Forty pounds will marry me,"
+
+quoth Mother Goose. _Forty rounds_ will marry us to the American Army,
+past divorcing, if we can only use them well. Our success or failure may
+make or mar the prospects of colored troops. But it is well to remember
+in advance that military success is really less satisfatory than any
+other, because it may depend on a moment's turn of events, and that may
+be determined by some trivial thing, neither to be anticipated nor
+controlled. Napoleon ought to have won at Waterloo by all reasonable
+calculations; but who cares? All that one can expect is, to do one's
+best, and to take with equanimity the fortune of war.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 3
+Up the St. Mary's
+
+
+If Sergeant Rivers was a natural king among my dusky soldiers, Corporal
+Robert Sutton was the natural prime-minister. If not in all respects the
+ablest, he was the wisest man in our ranks. As large, as powerful, and
+as black as our good-looking Color-Sergeant, but more heavily built and
+with less personal beauty, he had a more massive brain and a far more
+meditative and systematic intellect. Not yet grounded even in the
+spelling-book, his modes of thought were nevertheless strong, lucid, and
+accurate; and he yearned and pined for intellectual companionship beyond
+all ignorant men whom I have ever met. I believe that he would have
+talked all day and all night, for days together, to any officer who
+could instruct him, until his companions, at least, fell asleep
+exhausted. His comprehension of the whole problem of Slavery was more
+thorough and far-reaching than that of any Abolitionist, so far as its
+social and military aspects went; in that direction I could teach him
+nothing, and he taught me much. But it was his methods of thought which
+always impressed me chiefly: superficial brilliancy he left to others,
+and grasped at the solid truth.
+
+Of course his interest in the war and in the regiment was unbounded;
+he did not take to drill with especial readiness, but he was
+insatiable of it, and grudged every moment of relaxation. Indeed, he
+never had any such moments; his mind was at work all the time, even
+when he was singing hymns, of which he had endless store. He was not,
+however, one of our leading religionists, but his moral code was solid
+and reliable, like his mental processes. Ignorant as he was, the
+"years that bring the philosophic mind" had yet been his, and most of
+my young officers seemed boys beside him. He was a Florida man, and
+had been chiefly employed in lumbering and piloting on the St. Mary's
+River, which divides Florida from Georgia. Down this stream he had
+escaped in a "dug-out," and after thus finding the way, had returned
+(as had not a few of my men in other cases) to bring away wife and
+child. "I wouldn't have left my child, Cunnel," he said, with an
+emphasis that sounded the depths of his strong nature. And up this
+same river he was always imploring to be allowed to guide an
+expedition.
+
+Many other men had rival propositions to urge, for they gained
+self-confidence from drill and guard-duty, and were growing impatient of
+inaction. "Ought to go to work, Sa,--don't believe in we lyin' in camp
+eatin' up de perwisions." Such were the quaint complaints, which I heard
+with joy. Looking over my note-books of that period, I find them filled
+with topographical memoranda, jotted down by a flickering candle, from
+the evening talk of the men,--notes of vulnerable points along the coast,
+charts of rivers, locations of pickets. I prized these conversations not
+more for what I thus learned of the country than for what I learned of
+the men. One could thus measure their various degrees of accuracy and
+their average military instinct; and I must say that in every respect,
+save the accurate estimate of distances, they stood the test well. But
+no project took my fancy so much, after all, as that of the delegate
+from the St. Mary's River.
+
+The best peg on which to hang an expedition in the Department of the
+South, in those days, was the promise of lumber. Dwelling in the very
+land of Southern pine, the Department authorities had to send North
+for it, at a vast expense. There was reported to be plenty in the
+enemy's country, but somehow the colored soldiers were the only ones
+who had been lucky enough to obtain any, thus far, and the supply
+brought in by our men, after flooring the tents of the white regiments
+and our own, was running low. An expedition of white troops, four
+companies, with two steamers and two schooners, had lately returned
+empty-handed, after a week's foraging; and now it was our turn. They
+said the mills were all burned; but should we go up the St. Mary's,
+Corporal Sutton was prepared to offer more lumber than we had
+transportation to carry. This made the crowning charm of his
+suggestion. But there is never any danger of erring on the side of
+secrecy, in a military department; and I resolved to avoid all undue
+publicity for our plans, by not finally deciding on any until we
+should get outside the bar. This was happily approved by my superior
+officers, Major-General Hunter and Brigadier-General Saxton; and I was
+accordingly permitted to take three steamers, with four hundred and
+sixty. two officers and men, and two or three invited guests, and go
+down the coast on my own responsibility. We were, in short, to win our
+spurs; and if, as among the Araucanians, our spurs were made of
+lumber, so much the better. The whole history of the Department of the
+South had been defined as "a military picnic," and now we were to take
+our share of the entertainment.
+
+It seemed a pleasant share, when, after the usual vexations and
+delays, we found ourselves (January 23, 1863) gliding down the full
+waters of Beaufort River, the three vessels having sailed at different
+hours, with orders to rendezvous at St. Simon's Island, on the coast
+of Georgia. Until then, the flagship, so to speak, was to be the "Ben
+De Ford," Captain Hallet,--this being by far the largest vessel, and
+carrying most of the men. Major Strong was in command upon the "John
+Adams," an army gunboat, carrying a thirty-pound Parrott gun, two
+ten-pound Parrotts, and an eight-inch howitzer. Captain Trowbridge
+(since promoted Lieutenant-Colonel of the regiment) had charge of the
+famous "Planter," brought away from the Rebels by Robert Small; she
+carried a ten-pound Parrott gun, and two howitzers. The John Adams was
+our main reliance. She was an old East Boston ferry-boat, a
+"double-ender," admirable for river-work, but unfit for sea-service.
+She drew seven feet of water; the Planter drew only four; but the
+latter was very slow, and being obliged to go to St. Simon's by an
+inner passage, would delay us from the beginning. She delayed us so
+much, before the end, that we virtually parted company, and her career
+was almost entirely separated from our own.
+
+From boyhood I have had a fancy for boats, and have seldom been without
+a share, usually more or less fractional, in a rather indeterminate
+number of punts and wherries. But when, for the first time, I found
+myself at sea as Commodore of a fleet of armed steamers,--for even the
+Ben De Ford boasted a six-pounder or so,--it seemed rather an unexpected
+promotion. But it is a characteristic of army life, that one adapts
+one's self, as coolly as in a dream, to the most novel responsibilities.
+One sits on court-martial, for instance, and decides on the life of a
+fellow-creature, without being asked any inconvenient questions as to
+previous knowledge of Blackstone; and after such an experience, shall
+one shrink from wrecking a steamer or two in the cause of the nation? So
+I placidly accepted my naval establishment, as if it were a new form of
+boat-club, and looked over the charts, balancing between one river and
+another, as if deciding whether to pull up or down Lake Quinsigamond. If
+military life ever contemplated the exercise of the virtue of humility
+under any circumstances this would perhaps have been a good opportunity
+to begin its practice. But as the "Regulations" clearly contemplated
+nothing of the kind, and as I had never met with any precedent which
+looked in that direction, I had learned to check promptly all such weak
+proclivities.
+
+Captain Hallett proved the most frank and manly of sailors, and did
+everything for our comfort. He was soon warm in his praises of the
+demeanor of our men, which was very pleasant to hear, as this was the
+first time that colored soldiers in any number had been conveyed on
+board a transport, and I know of no place where a white volunteer
+appears to so much disadvantage. His mind craves occupation, his body
+is intensely uncomfortable, the daily emergency is not great enough to
+call out his heroic qualities, and he is apt to be surly,
+discontented, and impatient even of sanitary rules. The Southern black
+soldier, on the other hand, is seldom sea-sick (at least, such is my
+experience), and, if properly managed, is equally contented, whether
+idle or busy; he is, moreover, so docile that all needful rules are
+executed with cheerful acquiescence, and the quarters can therefore be
+kept clean and wholesome. Very forlorn faces were soon visible among
+the officers in the cabin, but I rarely saw such among the men.
+
+Pleasant still seemed our enterprise, as we anchored at early morning in
+the quiet waters of St. Simon's Sound, and saw the light fall softly on
+the beach and the low bluffs, on the picturesque plantation-houses which
+nestled there, and the graceful naval vessels that lay at anchor before
+us. When we afterwards landed the air had that peculiar Mediterranean
+translucency which Southern islands wear; and the plantation we visited
+had the loveliest tropical garden, though tangled and desolate, which I
+have ever seen in the South. The deserted house was embowered In great
+blossoming shrubs, and filled with hyacinthine odors, among which
+predominated that of the little Chickasaw roses which everywhere bloomed
+and trailed around. There were fig-trees and date-palms, crape-myrtles
+and wax-myrtles, Mexican agaves and English ivies, japonicas, bananas,
+oranges, lemons, oleanders, jonquils, great cactuses, and wild Florida
+lilies. This was not the plantation which Mrs. Kemble has since made
+historic, although that was on the same island; and I could not waste
+much sentiment over it, for it had belonged to a Northern renegade,
+Thomas Butler King. Yet I felt then, as I have felt a hundred times
+since, an emotion of heart-sickness at this desecration of a
+homestead,--and especially when, looking from a bare upper window of the
+empty house upon a range of broad, flat, sunny roofs, such as children
+love to play on, I thought how that place might have been loved by yet
+Innocent hearts, and I mourned anew the sacrilege of war.
+
+I had visited the flag-ship Wabash ere we left Port Royal Harbor, and
+had obtained a very kind letter of introduction from Admiral Dupont,
+that stately and courtly potentate, elegant as one's ideal French
+marquis; and under these credentials I received polite attention from
+the naval officers at St. Simon's,--Acting Volunteer Lieutenant Budd,
+of the gunboat Potomska, and Acting Master Moses, of the barque
+Fernandina. They made valuable suggestions in regard to the different
+rivers along the coast, and gave vivid descriptions of the last
+previous trip up the St. Mary's undertaken by Captain Stevens, U.S.N.,
+in the gunboat Ottawa, when he had to fight his way past batteries
+at every bluff in descending the narrow and rapid stream. I was warned
+that no resistance would be offered to the ascent, but only to our
+return; and was further cautioned against the mistake, then common, of
+underrating the courage of the Rebels. "It proved impossible to
+dislodge those fellows from the banks," my informant said; "they had
+dug rifle-pits, and swarmed like hornets, and when fairly silenced in
+one direction they were sure to open upon us from another." All this
+sounded alarming, but it was nine months since the event had happened;
+and although nothing had gone up the river meanwhile, I counted on
+less resistance now. And something must be risked anywhere.
+
+We were delayed all that day in waiting for our consort, and improved
+our time by verifying certain rumors about a quantity of new
+railroad-iron which was said to be concealed in the abandoned Rebel
+forts on St. Simon's and Jekyll Islands, and which would have much
+value at Port Royal, if we could unearth it. Some of our men had
+worked upon these very batteries, so that they could easily guide us;
+and by the additional discovery of a large flat-boat we were enabled
+to go to work in earnest upon the removal of the treasure. These iron
+bars, surmounted by a dozen feet of sand, formed an invulnerable roof
+for the magazines and bomb-proofs of the fort, and the men enjoyed
+demolishing them far more than they had relished their construction.
+Though the day was the 24th of January, 1863, the sun was very
+oppressive upon the sands; but all were in the highest spirits, and
+worked with the greatest zeal. The men seemed to regard these massive
+bars as their first trophies; and if the rails had been wreathed with
+roses, they could not have been got out in more holiday style. Nearly
+a hundred were obtained that day, besides a quantity of five-inch
+plank with which to barricade the very conspicuous pilot-houses of the
+John Adams. Still another day we were delayed, and could still keep at
+this work, not neglecting some foraging on the island from which
+horses, cattle, and agricultural implements were to be removed, and
+the few remaining colored families transferred to Fernandina. I had
+now become quite anxious about the missing steamboat, as the inner
+passage, by which alone she could arrive, was exposed at certain
+points to fire from Rebel batteries, and it would have been unpleasant
+to begin with a disaster. I remember that, as I stood on deck, in the
+still and misty evening, listening with strained senses for some sound
+of approach, I heard a low continuous noise from the distance, more
+wild and desolate than anything in my memory can parallel. It came
+from within the vast girdle of mist, and seemed like the cry of a
+myriad of lost souls upon the horizon's verge; it was Dante become
+audible: and yet it was but the accumulated cries of innumerable
+seafowl at the entrance of the outer bay.
+
+Late that night the Planter arrived. We left St. Simon's on the
+following morning, reached Fort Clinch by four o'clock, and there
+transferring two hundred men to the very scanty quarters of the John
+Adams, allowed the larger transport to go into Fernandina, while the two
+other vessels were to ascend the St. Mary's River, unless (as proved
+inevitable in the end) the defects in the boiler of the Planter should
+oblige her to remain behind. That night I proposed to make a sort of
+trial-trip up stream, as far as Township landing, some fifteen miles,
+there to pay our respects to Captain Clark's company of cavalry, whose
+camp was reported to lie near by. This was included in Corporal Sutton's
+programme, and seemed to me more inviting, and far more useful to the
+men, than any amount of mere foraging. The thing really desirable
+appeared to be to get them under fire as soon as possible, and to teach
+them, by a few small successes, the application of what they had learned
+in camp-.
+
+I had ascertained that the camp of this company lay five miles from
+the landing, and was accessible by two roads, one of which was a
+lumber-path, not commonly used, but which Corporal Sutton had helped
+to construct, and along which he could easily guide us. The plan was
+to go by night, surround the house and negro cabins at the landing (to
+prevent an alarm from being given), then to take the side path, and if
+all went well, to surprise the camp; but if they got notice of our
+approach, through their pickets, we should, at worst, have a fight, in
+which the best man must win.
+
+The moon was bright, and the river swift, but easy of navigation thus
+far. Just below Township I landed a small advance force, to surround the
+houses silently. With them went Corporal Sutton; and when, after
+rounding the point, I went on shore with a larger body of men, he met me
+with a silent chuckle of delight, and with the information that there
+was a negro in a neighboring cabin who had just come from the Rebel
+camp, and could give the latest information. While he hunted up this
+valuable auxiliary, I mustered my detachment, winnowing out the men who
+had coughs (not a few), and sending them ignominiously on board again: a
+process I had regularly to perform, during this first season of catarrh,
+on all occasions where quiet was needed. The only exception tolerated at
+this time was in the case of one man who offered a solemn pledge, that,
+if unable to restrain his cough, he would lie down on the ground, scrape
+a little hole, and cough into it unheard. The ingenuity of this
+proposition was irresistible, and the eager patient was allowed to pass
+muster.
+
+It was after midnight when we set off upon our excursion. I had about
+a hundred men, marching by the flank, with a small advanced guard, and
+also a few flankers, where the ground permitted. I put my Florida
+company at the head of the column, and had by my side Captain Metcalf,
+an excellent officer, and Sergeant Mclntyre, his first sergeant. We
+plunged presently in pine woods, whose resinous smell I can still
+remember. Corporal Sutton marched near me, with his captured negro
+guide, whose first fear and sullenness had yielded to the magic news
+of the President's Proclamation, then just issued, of which Governor
+Andrew had sent me a large printed supply;--we seldom found men who
+could read it, but they all seemed to feel more secure when they held
+it in their hands. We marched on through the woods, with no sound but
+the peeping of the frogs in a neighboring marsh, and the occasional
+yelping of a dog, as we passed the hut of some "cracker." This yelping
+always made Corporal Sutton uneasy; dogs are the detective officers of
+Slavery's police.
+
+We had halted once or twice to close up the ranks, and had marched some
+two miles, seeing and hearing nothing more. I had got all I could out of
+our new guide, and was striding on, rapt in pleasing contemplation. All
+had gone so smoothly that I had merely to fancy the rest as being
+equally smooth. Already I fancied our little detachment bursting out of
+the woods, in swift surprise, upon the Rebel quarters,--already the
+opposing commander, after hastily firing a charge or two from his
+revolver (of course above my head), had yielded at discretion, and was
+gracefully tendering, in a stage attitude, his unavailing sword,--when
+suddenly--
+
+There was a trampling of feet among the advanced guard as they came
+confusedly to a halt, and almost at the same instant a more ominous
+sound, as of galloping horses in the path before us. The moonlight
+outside the woods gave that dimness of atmosphere within which is more
+bewildering than darkness, because the eyes cannot adapt themselves to
+it so well. Yet I fancied, and others aver, that they saw the leader
+of an approaching party mounted on a white horse and reining up in the
+pathway; others, again, declare that he drew a pistol from the holster
+and took aim; others heard the words, "Charge in upon them! Surround
+them!" But all this was confused by the opening rifle-shots of our
+advanced guard, and, as clear observation was impossible, I made the
+.men fix their bayonets and kneel in the cover on each side the
+pathway, and I saw with delight the brave fellows, with Sergeant
+Mclntyre at their head, settling down in the grass as coolly and
+warily as if wild turkeys were the only game. Perhaps at the first
+shot a man fell at my elbow. I felt it no more than if a tree had
+fallen,--I was so busy watching my own men and the enemy, and planning
+what to do next. Some of our soldiers, misunderstanding the order,
+"Fix bayonets," were actually _charging_ with them, dashing off into
+the dim woods, with nothing to charge at but the vanishing tail of an
+imaginary horse,--for we could really see nothing. This zeal I noted
+with pleasure, and also with anxiety, as our greatest danger was from
+confusion and scattering; and for infantry to pursue cavalry would be
+a novel enterprise. Captain Metcalf stood by me well in keeping the
+men steady, as did Assistant Surgeon Minor, and Lieutenant, now
+Captain, Jackson. How the men in the rear were behaving I could not
+tell,--not so coolly, I afterwards found, because they were more
+entirely bewildered, supposing, until the shots came, that the column
+had simply halted for a moment's rest, as had been done once or twice
+before. They did not know who or where their assailants might be, and
+the fall of the man beside me created a hasty rumor that I was killed,
+so that it was on the whole an alarming experience for them. They
+kept together very tolerably, however, while our assailants, dividing,
+rode along on each side through the open pine-barren, firing into our
+ranks, but mostly over the heads of the men. My soldiers in turn fired
+rapidly,--too rapidly, being yet beginners,--and it was evident that,
+dim as it was, both sides had opportunity to do some execution.
+
+I could hardly tell whether the fight had lasted ten minutes or an hour,
+when, as the enemy's fire had evidently ceased or slackened, I gave the
+order to cease firing. But it was very difficult at first to make them
+desist: the taste of gunpowder was too intoxicating. One of them was
+heard to mutter, indignantly, "Why de Cunnel order _Cease firing_, when
+de Secesh blazin' away at de rate ob ten dollar a day?" Every incidental
+occurrence seemed somehow to engrave itself upon my perceptions, without
+interrupting the main course of thought. Thus I know, that, in one of
+the pauses of the affair, there came wailing through the woods a cracked
+female voice, as if calling back some stray husband who had run out to
+join in the affray, "John, John, are you going to leave me, John? Are
+you going to let me and the children be killed, John?" I suppose the
+poor thing's fears of gunpowder were very genuine; but it was such a
+wailing squeak, and so infinitely ludicrous, and John was probably
+ensconced so very safely in some hollow tree, that I could see some of
+the men showing all their white teeth in the very midst of the fight.
+But soon this sound, with all others, had ceased, and left us in
+peaceful possession of the field.
+
+I have made the more of this little affair because it was the first
+stand-up fight in which my men had been engaged, though they had been
+under fire, in an irregular way, in their small early expeditions. To me
+personally the event was of the greatest value: it had given us all an
+opportunity to test each other, and our abstract surmises were changed
+into positive knowledge. Hereafter it was of small importance what
+nonsense might be talked or written about colored troops; so long as
+mine did not flinch, it made no difference to me. My brave young
+officers, themselves mostly new to danger, viewed the matter much as I
+did; and yet we were under bonds of life and death to form a correct
+opinion, which was more than could be said of the Northern editors, and
+our verdict was proportionately of greater value.
+
+I was convinced from appearances that we had been victorious, so far,
+though I could not suppose that this would be the last of it. We knew
+neither the numbers of the enemy, nor their plans, nor their present
+condition: whether they had surprised us or whether we had surprised
+them was all a mystery. Corporal Sutton was urgent to go on and complete
+the enterprise. All my impulses said the same thing; but then I had the
+most explicit injunctions from General Saxton to risk as little as
+possible in this first enterprise, because of the fatal effect on public
+sentiment of even an honorable defeat. We had now an honorable victory,
+so far as it went; the officers and men around me were in good spirits,
+but the rest of the column might be nervous; and it seemed so important
+to make the first fight an entire success, that I thought it wiser to
+let well alone; nor have I ever changed this opinion. For one's self,
+Montrose's verse may be well applied, "To win or lose it all." But one
+has no right to deal thus lightly with the fortunes of a race, and that
+was the weight which I always felt as resting on our action. If my raw
+infantry force had stood unflinchingly a night-surprise from "de boss
+cavalry," as they reverentially termed them, I felt that a good
+beginning had been made. All hope of surprising the enemy's camp was now
+at an end; I was willing and ready to fight the cavalry over again, but
+it seemed wiser that we, not they, should select the ground.
+
+Attending to the wounded, therefore, and making as we best could
+stretchers for those who were to be carried, including the remains of
+the man killed at the first discharge (Private William Parsons of
+Company G), and others who seemed at the point of death, we marched
+through the woods to the landing,--expecting at every moment to be
+involved in another fight. This not occurring, I was more than ever
+satisfied that we had won a victory; for it was obvious that a mounted
+force would not allow a detachment of infantry to march two miles
+through open woods by night without renewing the fight, unless they
+themselves had suffered a good deal. On arrival at the landing, seeing
+that there was to be no immediate affray, I sent most of the men on
+board, and called for volunteers to remain on shore with me and hold the
+plantation-house till morning. They eagerly offered; and I was glad to
+see them, when posted as sentinels by Lieutenants Hyde and Jackson, who
+stayed with me, pace their beats as steadily and challenge as coolly as
+veterans, though of course there was some powder wasted on imaginary
+foes. Greatly to my surprise, however, we had no other enemies to
+encounter. We did not yet know that we had killed the first lieutenant
+of the cavalry, and that our opponents had retreated to the woods in
+dismay, without daring to return to their camp. This at least was the
+account we heard from prisoners afterwards, and was evidently the tale
+current in the neighborhood, though the statements published in Southern
+newspapers did not correspond. Admitting the death of Lieutenant Jones,
+the Tallahassee Floridian of February 14th stated that "Captain Clark,
+finding the enemy in strong force, fell back with his command to camp,
+and removed his ordnance and commissary and other stores, with twelve
+negroes on their way to the enemy, captured on that day."
+
+In the morning, my invaluable surgeon, Dr. Rogers, sent me his report
+of killed and wounded; and I have been since permitted to make the
+following extracts from his notes: "One man killed instantly by ball
+through the heart, and seven wounded, one of whom will die. Braver men
+never lived. One man with two bullet-holes through the large muscles
+of the shoulders and neck brought off from the scene of action, two
+miles distant, two muskets; and not a murmur has escaped his lips.
+Another, Robert Sutton, with three wounds,--one of which, being on the
+skull, may cost him his life,--would not report himself till compelled
+to do so by his officers. While dressing his wounds, he quietly talked
+of what they had done, and of what they yet could do. To-day I have
+had the Colonel _order_ him to obey me. He is perfectly quiet and
+cool, but takes this whole affair with the religious bearing of a man
+who realizes that freedom is sweeter than life. Yet another soldier
+did not report himself at all, but remained all night on guard, and
+possibly I should not have known of his having had a buck-shot in his
+shoulder, if some duty requiring a sound shoulder had not been
+required of him to-day." This last, it may be added, had persuaded a
+comrade to dig out the buck-shot, for fear of being ordered on the
+sick-list. And one of those who were carried to the vessel--a man
+wounded through the lungs--asked only if I were safe, the contrary
+having been reported. An officer may be pardoned some enthusiasm for
+such men as these.
+
+The anxious night having passed away without an attack, another
+problem opened with the morning. For the first time, my officers and
+men found themselves in possession of an enemy's abode; and though
+there was but little temptation to plunder, I knew that I must here
+begin to draw the line. I had long since resolved to prohibit
+absolutely all indiscriminate pilfering and wanton outrage, and to
+allow nothing to be taken or destroyed but by proper authority. The
+men, to my great satisfaction, entered into this view at once, and so
+did (perhaps a shade less readily, in some cases) the officers. The
+greatest trouble was with the steamboat hands, and I resolved to let
+them go ashore as little as possible. Most articles of furniture were
+already, however, before our visit, gone from the plantation-house,
+which was now used only as a picket-station. The only valuable article
+was a pianoforte, for which a regular packing-box lay invitingly ready
+outside. I had made up my mind, in accordance with the orders given to
+naval commanders in that department,* to burn all picket-stations, and
+all villages from which I should be covertly attacked, and nothing
+else; and as this house was destined to the flames, I should have left
+the piano in it, but for the seductions of that box. With such a
+receptacle all ready, even to the cover, it would have seemed like
+flying in the face of Providence not to put the piano in. I ordered it
+removed, therefore, and afterwards presented it to the school for
+colored children at Fernandina. This I mention because it was the only
+article of property I ever took, or knowingly suffered to be taken, in
+the enemy's country, save for legitimate military uses, from first to
+last; nor would I have taken this, but for the thought of the school,
+and, as aforesaid, the temptation of the box. If any other officer has
+been more rigid, with equal opportunities, let him cast the first
+stone.
+
+* "It is my desire to avoid the destruction of private property, unless
+used for picket or guard-stations, or for other military
+purposes, by the enemy. ... Of course, if fired upon from any place, it
+is your duty, if possible, to destroy it." Letter of ADMIRAL DUPONT,
+commanding South Atlantic Squadron, to LIEUTENANT-COMMANDER HUGHES of
+United States Gunboat Mohawk, Fernandina Harbor.
+
+I think the zest with which the men finally set fire to the house at my
+order was enhanced by this previous abstemiousness; but there is a
+fearful fascination in the use of fire, which every child knows in the
+abstract, and which I found to hold true in the practice. On our way
+down river we had opportunity to test this again.
+
+The ruined town of St. Mary's had at that time a bad reputation, among
+both naval and military men. Lying but a short distance above
+Fernandina, on the Georgia side, it was occasionally visited by our
+gunboats. I was informed that the only residents of the town were three
+old women, who were apparently kept there as spies,--that, on our
+approach, the aged crones would come out and wave white
+handkerchiefs,--that they would receive us hospitably, profess to be
+profoundly loyal, and exhibit a portrait of Washington,--that they would
+solemnly assure us that no Rebel pickets had been there for many
+weeks,--but that in the adjoining yard we should find fresh horse-tracks,
+and that we should be fired upon by guerillas the moment we left
+the wharf. My officers had been much excited by these tales; and I had
+assured them that, if this programme were literally carried out, we
+would straightway return and burn the town, or what was left of it, for
+our share. It was essential to show my officers and men that, while
+rigid against irregular outrage, we could still be inexorable against
+the enemy.
+
+We had previously planned to stop at this town, on our way down river,
+for some valuable lumber which we had espied on a wharf; and gliding
+down the swift current, shelling a few bluffs as we passed, we soon
+reached it. Punctual as the figures in a panorama appeared the old
+ladies with their white handkerchiefs. Taking possession of the town,
+much of which had previously been destroyed by the gunboats, and
+stationing the color-guard, to their infinite delight, in the cupola of
+the most conspicuous house, I deployed skirmishers along the exposed
+suburb, and set a detail of men at work on the lumber. After a stately
+and decorous interview with the queens of society of St. Mary's,--is it
+Scott who says that nothing improves the manners like piracy?--I
+peacefully withdrew the men when the work was done. There were faces of
+disappointment among the officers,--for all felt a spirit of mischief
+after the last night's adventure,--when, just as we had fairly swung out
+into the stream and were under way, there came, like the sudden burst of
+a tropical tornado, a regular little hail-storm of bullets into the open
+end of the boat, driving every gunner in an instant from his post, and
+surprising even those who were looking to be surprised. The shock was
+but for a second; and though the bullets had pattered precisely like the
+sound of hail upon the iron cannon, yet nobody was hurt. With very
+respectable promptness, order was restored, our own shells were flying
+into the woods from which the attack proceeded, and we were steaming up
+to the wharf again, according to promise.
+
+Who shall describe the theatrical attitudes assumed by the old ladies
+as they reappeared at the front-door,--being luckily out of direct
+range,--and set the handkerchiefs in wilder motion than ever? They
+brandished them, they twirled them after the manner of the domestic
+mop, they clasped their hands, handkerchiefs included. Meanwhile their
+friends in the wood popped away steadily at us, with small effect; and
+occasionally an invisible field-piece thundered feebly from another
+quarter, with equally invisible results. Reaching the wharf, one
+company, under Lieutenant (now Captain) Danil-son, was promptly
+deployed in search of our assailants, who soon grew silent. Not so the
+old ladies, when I announced to them my purpose, and added, with
+extreme regret, that, as the wind was high, I should burn only that
+half of the town which lay to leeward of their house, which did not,
+after all, amount to much. Between gratitude for this degree of
+mercy, and imploring appeals for greater, the treacherous old ladies
+manoeuvred with clasped hands and demonstrative handkerchiefs around
+me, impairing the effect of their eloquence by constantly addressing
+me as "Mr. Captain"; for I have observed, that, while the sternest
+officer is greatly propitiated by attributing to him a rank a little
+higher than his own, yet no one is ever mollified by an error in the
+opposite direction. I tried, however, to disregard such low
+considerations, and to strike the correct mean between the sublime
+patriot and the unsanctified incendiary, while I could find no refuge
+from weak contrition save in greater and greater depths of courtesy;
+and so melodramatic became our interview that some of the soldiers
+still maintain that "dem dar ole Secesh women been a-gwine for kiss de
+Cunnel," before we ended. But of this monstrous accusation I wish to
+register an explicit denial, once for all.
+
+Dropping down to Fernandina unmolested after this affair, we were
+kindly received by the military and naval commanders,--Colonel Hawley,
+of the Seventh Connecticut (now Brigadier-General Hawley), and
+Lieutenant-Commander Hughes, of the gunboat Mohawk. It turned out very
+opportunely that both of these officers had special errands to suggest
+still farther up the St. Mary's, and precisely in the region where I
+wished to go. Colonel Hawley showed me a letter from the War
+Department, requesting him to ascertain the possibility of obtaining a
+supply of brick for Fort Clinch from the brickyard which had furnished
+the original materials, but which had not been visited since the
+perilous river-trip of the Ottawa. Lieutenant Hughes wished to obtain
+information for the Admiral respecting a Rebel steamer,--the
+Berosa,--said to be lying somewhere up the river, and awaiting her
+chance to run the blockade. I jumped at the opportunity. Berosa and
+brickyard,--both were near Wood-stock, the former home of Corporal
+Sutton; he was ready and eager to pilot us up the river; the moon
+would be just right that evening, setting at 3h. 19m. A.M.; and our
+boat was precisely the one to undertake the expedition. Its
+double-headed shape was just what was needed in that swift and crooked
+stream; the exposed pilot-houses had been tolerably barricaded with
+the thick planks from St. Simon's; and we further obtained some
+sand-bags from Fort Clinch, through the aid of Captain Sears, the
+officer in charge, who had originally suggested the expedition after
+brick. In return for this aid, the Planter was sent back to the wharf
+at St. Mary's, to bring away a considerable supply of the same
+precious article, which we had observed near the wharf. Meanwhile the
+John Adams was coaling from naval supplies, through the kindness of
+Lieutenant Hughes; and the Ben De Ford was taking in the lumber which
+we had yesterday brought down. It was a great disappointment to be
+unable to take the latter vessel up the river; but I was unwillingly
+convinced that, though the depth of water might be sufficient, yet her
+length would be unmanageable in the swift current and sharp turns. The
+Planter must also be sent on a separate cruise, as her weak and
+disabled machinery made her useless for my purpose. Two hundred men
+were therefore transferred, as before, to the narrow hold of the John
+Adams, in addition to the company permanently stationed on board to
+work the guns. At seven o'clock on the evening of January 29th,
+beneath a lovely moon, we steamed up the river.
+
+Never shall I forget the mystery and excitement of that night. I know
+nothing in life more fascinating than the nocturnal ascent of an
+unknown river, leading far into an enemy's country, where one glides
+in the dim moonlight between dark hills and meadows, each turn of the
+channel making it seem like an inland lake, and cutting you off as by
+a barrier from all behind,--with no sign of human life, but an
+occasional picket-fire left glimmering beneath the bank, or the yelp
+of a dog from some low-lying plantation. On such occasions every nerve
+is strained to its utmost tension; all dreams of romance appear to
+promise immediate fulfilment; all lights on board the vessel are
+obscured, loud voices are hushed; you fancy a thousand men on shore,
+and yet see nothing; the lonely river, unaccustomed to furrowing
+keels, lapses by the vessel with a treacherous sound; and all the
+senses are merged in a sort of anxious trance. Three tunes I have had
+in full perfection this fascinating experience; but that night was the
+first, and its zest was the keenest. It will come back to me in
+dreams, if I live a thousand years.
+
+I feared no attack during our ascent,--that danger was for our return;
+but I feared the intricate navigation of the river, though I did not
+fully know, till the actual experience, how dangerous it was. We passed
+without trouble far above the scene of our first fight,--the Battle of
+the Hundred Pines, as my officers had baptized it; and ever, as we
+ascended, the banks grew steeper, the current swifter, the channel more
+tortuous and more encumbered with projecting branches and drifting wood.
+No piloting less skilful than that of Corporal Sutton and his mate,
+James Bezzard, could have carried us through, I thought; and no
+side-wheel steamer less strong than a ferry-boat could have borne the
+crash and force with which we struck the wooded banks of the river. But
+the powerful paddles, built to break the Northern ice, could crush the
+Southern pine as well; and we came safely out of entanglements that at
+first seemed formidable. We had the tide with us, which makes steering
+far more difficult; and, in the sharp angles of the river, there was
+often no resource but to run the bow boldly on shore, let the stern
+swing round, and then reverse the motion. As the reversing machinery was
+generally out of order, the engineer stupid or frightened, and the
+captain excited, this involved moments of tolerably concentrated
+anxiety. Eight times we grounded in the upper waters, and once lay
+aground for half an hour; but at last we dropped anchor before the
+little town of Woodstock, after moonset and an hour before daybreak,
+just as I had planned, and so quietly that scarcely a dog barked, and
+not a soul in the town, as we afterwards found, knew of our arrival.
+
+As silently as possible, the great flat-boat which we had brought from
+St. Simon's was filled with men. Major Strong was sent on shore with two
+companies,--those of Captain James and Captain Metcalf,--with instructions
+to surround the town quietly, allow no one to leave it, molest no one,
+and hold as temporary prisoners every man whom he found. I watched them
+push off into the darkness, got the remaining force ready to land, and
+then paced the deck for an hour in silent watchfulness, waiting for
+rifle-shots. Not a sound came from the shore, save the barking of dogs
+and the morning crow of cocks; the time seemed interminable; but when
+daylight came, I landed, and found a pair of scarlet trousers pacing on
+their beat before every house in the village, and a small squad of
+prisoners, stunted and forlorn as Falstaff's ragged regiment, already hi
+hand. I observed with delight the good demeanor of my men towards these
+forlorn Anglo-Saxons, and towards the more tumultuous women. Even one
+soldier, who threatened to throw an old termagant into the river, took
+care to append the courteous epithet "Madam."
+
+I took a survey of the premises. The chief house, a pretty one with
+picturesque outbuildings, was that of Mrs. A., who owned the mills and
+lumber-wharves adjoining. The wealth of these wharves had not been
+exaggerated. There was lumber enough to freight half a dozen steamers,
+and I half regretted that I had agreed to take down a freight of bricks
+instead. Further researches made me grateful that I had already
+explained to my men the difference between public foraging and private
+plunder. Along the river-bank I found building after building crowded
+with costly furniture, all neatly packed, just as it was sent up from
+St. Mary's when that town was abandoned. Pianos were a drug; china,
+glass-ware, mahogany, pictures, all were here. And here were my men, who
+knew that their own labor had earned for their masters these luxuries,
+or such as these; their own wives and children were still sleeping on
+the floor, perhaps, at Beaufort or Fernandina; and yet they submitted,
+almost without a murmur, to the enforced abstinence. Bed and bedding for
+our hospitals they might take from those store-rooms,--such as the
+surgeon selected,--also an old flag which we found in a corner, and
+an old field-piece (which the regiment still possesses),--but after this
+the doors were closed and left unmolested. It cost a struggle to some of
+the men, whose wives were destitute, I know; but their pride was very
+easily touched, and when this abstinence was once recognized as a rule,
+they claimed it as an honor, in this and all succeeding expeditions. I
+flatter myself that, if they had once been set upon wholesale
+plundering, they would have done it as thoroughly as their betters; but
+I have always been infinitely grateful, both for the credit and for the
+discipline of the regiment,--as well as for the men's subsequent
+lives,--that the opposite method was adopted.
+
+When the morning was a little advanced, I called on Mrs. A., who
+received me in quite a stately way at her own door with "To what am I
+indebted for the honor of this visit, Sir?" The foreign name of the
+family, and the tropical look of the buildings, made it seem (as,
+indeed, did all the rest of the adventure) like a chapter out of "Amyas
+Leigh"; but as I had happened to hear that the lady herself was a
+Philadel-phian, and her deceased husband a New-Yorker, I could not feel
+even that modicum of reverence due to sincere Southerners. However, I
+wished to present my credentials; so, calling up my companion, I said
+that I believed she had been previously acquainted with Corporal Robert
+Sutton? I never saw a finer bit of unutterable indignation than came
+over the face of my hostess, as she slowly recognized him. She drew
+herself up, and dropped out the monosyllables of her answer as if they
+were so many drops of nitric acid. "Ah," quoth my lady, "we called him
+Bob!"
+
+It was a group for a painter. The whole drama of the war seemed to
+reverse itself in an instant, and my tall, well-dressed, imposing,
+philosophic Corporal dropped down the immeasurable depth into a mere
+plantation "Bob" again. So at least in my imagination; not to that
+person himself. Too essentially dignified in his nature to be moved by
+words where substantial realities were in question, he simply turned
+from the lady, touched his hat to me, and asked if I would wish to see
+the slave-jail, as he had the keys in his possession.
+
+If he fancied that I was in danger of being overcome by
+blandishments, and needed to be recalled to realities, it was a
+master-stroke.
+
+I must say that, when the door of that villanous edifice was thrown open
+before me, I felt glad that my main interview with its lady proprietor
+had passed before I saw it. It was a small building, like a Northern
+corn-barn, and seemed to have as prominent and as legitimate a place
+among the outbuildings of the establishment. In the middle of the door
+was a large staple with a rusty chain, like an ox-chain, for fastening a
+victim down. When the door had been opened after the death of the late
+proprietor, my informant said, a man was found padlocked in that chain.
+We found also three pairs of stocks of various construction, two of
+which had smaller as well as larger holes, evidently for the feet of
+women or children. In a building near by we found something far more
+complicated, which was perfectly unintelligible till the men explained
+all its parts: a machine so contrived that a person once imprisoned in
+it could neither sit, stand, nor lie, but must support the body half
+raised, in a position scarcely endurable. I have since bitterly
+reproached myself for leaving this piece of ingenuity behind; but it
+would have cost much labor to remove it, and to bring away the other
+trophies seemed then enough. I remember the unutterable loathing with
+which I leaned against the door of that prison-house; I had thought
+myself seasoned to any conceivable horrors of Slavery, but it seemed as
+if the visible presence of that den of sin would choke me. Of course it
+would have been burned to the ground by us, but that this would have
+involved the sacrifice of every other building and all the piles of
+lumber, and for the moment it seemed as if the sacrifice would be
+righteous. But I forbore, and only took as trophies the instruments of
+torture and the keys of the jail.
+
+We found but few colored people in this vicinity; some we brought away
+with us, and an old man and woman preferred to remain. All the white
+males whom we found I took as hostages, in order to shield us, if
+possible, from attack on our way down river, explaining to them that
+they would be put on shore when the dangerous points were passed. I knew
+that their wives could easily send notice of this fact to the
+Rebel forces along the river. My hostages were a forlorn-looking set of
+"crackers," far inferior to our soldiers in _physique_, and yet quite
+equal, the latter declared, to the average material of the Southern
+armies. None were in uniform, but this proved nothing as to their being
+soldiers. One of them, a mere boy, was captured at his own door, with
+gun in hand. It was a fowling-piece, which he used only, as his mother
+plaintively assured me, "to shoot little birds with." As the guileless
+youth had for this purpose loaded the gun with eighteen buck-shot, we
+thought it justifiable to confiscate both the weapon and the owner, in
+mercy to the birds.
+
+We took from this place, for the use of the army, a flock of some thirty
+sheep, forty bushels of rice, some other provisions, tools, oars, and a
+little lumber, leaving all possible space for the bricks which we
+expected to obtain just below. I should have gone farther up the river,
+but for a dangerous boom which kept back a great number of logs in a
+large brook that here fell into the St. Mary's; the stream ran with
+force, and if the Rebels had wit enough to do it, they might in ten
+minutes so choke the river with drift-wood as infinitely to enhance our
+troubles. So we dropped down stream a mile or two, found the very
+brickyard from which Fort Clinch had been constructed,--still stored with
+bricks, and seemingly unprotected. Here Sergeant Rivers again planted
+his standard, and the men toiled eagerly, for several hours, in loading
+our boat to the utmost with the bricks. Meanwhile we questioned black
+and white witnesses, and learned for the first tune that the Rebels
+admitted a repulse at Township Landing, and that Lieutenant Jones and
+ten of their number were killed,--though this I fancy to have been an
+exaggeration. They also declared that the mysterious steamer Berosa was
+lying at the head of the river, but was a broken-down and worthless
+affair, and would never get to sea. The result has since proved this;
+for the vessel subsequently ran the blockade and foundered near shore,
+the crew barely escaping with their lives. I had the pleasure, as it
+happened, of being the first person to forward this information to
+Admiral Dupont, when it came through the pickets, many months
+after,--thus concluding my report on the Berosa.
+
+Before the work at the yard was over the pickets reported mounted men in
+the woods near by, as had previously been the report at Woodstock. This
+admonished us to lose no time; and as we left the wharf, immediate
+arrangements were made to have the gun crews all in readiness, and to
+keep the rest of the men below, since their musketry would be of little
+use now, and I did not propose to risk a life unnecessarily. The chief
+obstacle to this was their own eagerness; penned down on one side, they
+popped up on the other; their officers, too, were eager to see what was
+going on, and were almost as hard to cork down as the men. Add to this,
+that the vessel was now very crowded, and that I had to be chiefly on
+the hurricane-deck with the pilots. Captain Clifton, master of the
+vessel, was brave to excess, and as much excited as the men; he could no
+more be kept in the little pilot-house than they below; and when we had
+passed one or two bluffs, with no sign of an enemy, he grew more and
+more irrepressible, and exposed himself conspicuously on the upper deck.
+Perhaps we all were a little lulled by apparent safety; for myself, I
+lay down for a moment on a settee in a state-room, having been on my
+feet, almost without cessation, for twenty-four hours.
+
+Suddenly there swept down from a bluff above us, on the Georgia side,
+a mingling of shout and roar and rattle as of a tornado let loose; and
+as a storm of bullets came pelting against the sides of the vessel,
+and through a window, there went up a shrill answering shout from our
+own men. It took but an instant for me to reach the gun-deck. After
+all my efforts the men had swarmed once more from below, and already,
+crowding at both ends of the boat, were loading and firing with
+inconceivable rapidity, shouting to each other, "Nebber gib it up!"
+and of course having no steady aim, as the vessel glided and whirled
+in the swift current. Meanwhile the officers in charge of the large
+guns had their crews in order, and our shells began to fly over the
+bluffs, which, as we now saw, should have been shelled in advance,
+only that we had to economize ammunition. The other soldiers I drove
+below, almost by main force, with the aid of their officers, who
+behaved exceedingly well, giving the men leave to fire from the open
+port-holes which lined the lower deck, almost at the water's level. In
+the very midst of the _melee_ Major Strong came from the upper deck,
+with a face of horror, and whispered to me, "Captain Clifton was
+killed at the first shot by my side."
+
+If he had said that the vessel was on fire the shock would hardly have
+been greater. Of course, the military commander on board a steamer is
+almost as helpless as an unarmed man, so far as the risks of water go. A
+seaman must command there. In the hazardous voyage of last night, I had
+learned, though unjustly, to distrust every official on board the
+steamboat except this excitable, brave, warm-hearted sailor; and now,
+among these added dangers, to lose him! The responsibility for his life
+also thrilled me; he was not among my soldiers, and yet he was killed. I
+thought of his wife and children, of whom he had spoken; but one learns
+to think rapidly in war, and, cautioning the Major to silence, I went up
+to the hurricane-deck and drew in the helpless body, that it should be
+safe from further desecration, and then looked to see where we were.
+
+We were now gliding past a safe reach of marsh, while our assailants
+were riding by cross-paths to attack us at the next bluff. It was Reed's
+Bluff where we were first attacked, and Scrubby Bluff, I think, was
+next. They were shelled in advance, but swarmed manfully to the banks
+again as we swept round one of the sharp angles of the stream beneath
+their fire. My men were now pretty well imprisoned below in the hot and
+crowded hold, and actually fought each other, the officers afterwards
+said, for places at the open port-holes, from which to aim. Others
+implored to be landed, exclaiming that they "supposed de Cunnel knew
+best," but it was "mighty mean" to be shut up down below, when they
+might be "fightin' de Secesh _in de clar field_." This clear field, and
+no favor, was what they thenceforward sighed for. But in such difficult
+navigation it would have been madness to think of landing, although one
+daring Rebel actually sprang upon the large boat which we towed astern,
+where he was shot down by one of our sergeants. This boat was soon after
+swamped and abandoned, then taken and repaired by the Rebels at a
+later date, and finally, by a piece of dramatic completeness, was seized
+by a party of fugitive slaves, who escaped in it to our lines, and some
+of whom enlisted in my own regiment.
+
+It has always been rather a mystery to me why the Rebels did not fell a
+few trees across the stream at some of the many sharp angles where we
+might so easily have been thus imprisoned. This, however, they did not
+attempt, and with the skilful pilotage of our trusty
+Corporal,--philosophic as Socrates through all the din, and occasionally
+relieving his mind by taking a shot with his rifle through the high
+portholes of the pilot-house,--we glided safely on. The steamer did not
+ground once on the descent, and the mate in command, Mr. Smith, did his
+duty very well. The plank sheathing of the pilot-house was penetrated by
+few bullets, though struck by so many outside that it was visited as a
+curiosity after our return; and even among the gun-crews, though they
+had no protection, not a man was hurt. As we approached some wooded
+bluff, usually on the Georgia side, we could see galloping along the
+hillside what seemed a regiment of mounted riflemen, and could see our
+shell scatter them ere we approached. Shelling did not, however, prevent
+a rather fierce fusilade from our old friends of Captain dark's company
+at Waterman's Bluff, near Township Landing; but even this did no serious
+damage, and this was the last.
+
+It was of course impossible, while thus running the gauntlet, to put
+our hostages ashore, and I could only explain to them that they must
+thank their own friends for their inevitable detention. I was by no
+means proud of their forlorn appearance, and besought Colonel Hawley
+to take them off my hands; but he was sending no flags of truce at
+that time, and liked their looks no better than I did. So I took them
+to Port Royal, where they were afterwards sent safely across the
+lines. Our men were pleased at taking them back with us, as they had
+already said, regretfully, "S'pose we leave dem Secesh at Fernandina,
+General Saxby won't see 'em,"--as if they were some new natural
+curiosity, which indeed they were. One soldier further suggested the
+expediency of keeping them permanently in camp, to be used as marks
+for the guns of the relieved guard every morning. But this was rather
+an ebullition of fancy than a sober proposition.
+
+Against these levities I must put a piece of more tragic eloquence,
+which I took down by night on the steamer's deck from the thrilling
+harangue of Corporal Adam Allston, one of our most gifted prophets,
+whose influence over the men was unbounded. "When I heard," he said, "de
+bombshell a-screamin' troo de woods like de Judgment Day, I said to
+myself, 'If my head was took off to-night, dey couldn't put my soul in
+de torments, perceps [except] God was my enemy!' And when de
+rifle-bullets came whizzin' across de deck, I cried aloud, 'God help my
+congregation! Boys, load and fire!'"
+
+I must pass briefly over the few remaining days of our cruise. At
+Fernandina we met the Planter, which had been successful on her separate
+expedition, and had destroyed extensive salt-works at Crooked River,
+under charge of the energetic Captain Trowbridge, efficiently aided by
+Captain Rogers. Our commodities being in part delivered at Fernandina,
+our decks being full, coal nearly out, and time up, we called once more
+at St. Simon's Sound, bringing away the remainder of our railroad-iron,
+with some which the naval officers had previously disinterred, and then
+steamed back to Beaufort. Arriving there at sunrise (February 2, 1863),
+I made my way with Dr. Rogers to General Saxton's bedroom, and laid
+before him the keys and shackles of the slave-prison, with my report of
+the good conduct of the men,--as Dr. Rogers remarked, a message from
+heaven and another from hell.
+
+Slight as this expedition now seems among the vast events of the war,
+the future student of the newspapers of that day will find that it
+occupied no little space in their columns, so intense was the interest
+which then attached to the novel experiment of employing black troops.
+So obvious, too, was the value, during this raid, of their local
+knowledge and their enthusiasm, that it was impossible not to find in
+its successes new suggestions for the war. Certainly I would not have
+consented to repeat the enterprise with the bravest white troops,
+leaving Corporal Sutton and his mates behind, for I should have
+expected to fail. For a year after our raid the Upper St. Mary's
+remained unvisited, till in 1864 the large force with which we held
+Florida secured peace upon its banks; then Mrs. A. took the oath of
+allegiance, the Government bought her remaining lumber, and the John
+Adams again ascended with a detachment of my men under Lieutenant
+Parker, and brought a portion of it to Fernandina. By a strange turn
+of fortune, Corporal Sutton (now Sergeant) was at this time in jail at
+Hilton Head, under sentence of court-martial for an alleged act of
+mutiny,--an affair in which the general voice of our officers
+sustained him and condemned his accusers, so that he soon received a
+full pardon, and was restored in honor to his place in the regiment,
+which he has ever since held.
+
+Nothing can ever exaggerate the fascinations of war, whether on the
+largest or smallest scale. When we settled down into camp-life again,
+it seemed like a butterfly's folding its wings to re-enter the
+chrysalis. None of us could listen to the crack of a gun without
+recalling instantly the sharp shots that spilled down from the bluffs
+of the St. Mary's, or hear a sudden trampling of horsemen by night
+without recalling the sounds which startled us on the Field of the
+Hundred Pines. The memory of our raid was preserved in the camp by
+many legends of adventure, growing vaster and more incredible as time
+wore on,--and by the morning appeals to the surgeon of some veteran
+invalids, who could now cut off all reproofs and suspicions with
+"Doctor, I's been a sickly pusson eber since de _expeditious_." But to
+me the most vivid remembrancer was the flock of sheep which we had
+"lifted." The Post Quartermaster discreetly gave us the charge of
+them, and they rilled a gap in the landscape and in the larder,--
+which last had before presented one unvaried round of impenetrable
+beef. Mr. Obabiah Oldbuck, when he decided to adopt a pastoral life,
+and assumed the provisional name of Thyrsis, never looked upon his
+flocks and herds with more unalloyed contentment than I upon that
+fleecy family. I had been familiar, in Kansas, with the metaphor by
+which the sentiments of an owner were credited to his property, and
+had heard of a proslavery colt and an antislavery cow. The fact that
+these sheep were but recently converted from "Se-cesh" sentiments was
+their crowning charm. Methought they frisked and fattened in the joy
+of their deliverance from the shadow of Mrs. A.'s slave-jail, and
+gladly contemplated translation into mutton-broth for sick or wounded
+soldiers. The very slaves who once, perchance, were sold at auction
+with yon aged patriarch of the flock, had now asserted their humanity,
+and would devour him as hospital rations. Meanwhile our shepherd bore
+a sharp bayonet without a crook, and I felt myself a peer of Ulysses
+and Rob Roy,--those sheep-stealers of less elevated aims,--when I met
+in my daily rides these wandering trophies of our wider wanderings.
+
+
+
+Chapter 4
+Up the St. John's
+
+
+There was not much stirring in the Department of the South early in
+1863, and the St. Mary's expedition had afforded a new sensation. Of
+course the few officers of colored troops, and a larger number who
+wished to become such, were urgent for further experiments in the same
+line; and the Florida tax-commissioners were urgent likewise. I well
+remember the morning when, after some preliminary correspondence, I
+steamed down from Beaufort, S. C., to Hilton Head, with General Saxton,
+Judge S., and one or two others, to have an interview on the matter with
+Major-General Hunter, then commanding the Department.
+
+Hilton Head, in those days, seemed always like some foreign military
+station in the tropics. The long, low, white buildings, with piazzas
+and verandas on the water-side; the general impression of heat and
+lassitude, existence appearing to pulsate only with the sea-breeze;
+the sandy, almost impassable streets; and the firm, level beach, on
+which everybody walked who could get there: all these suggested
+Jamaica or the East Indies. Then the head-quarters at the end of the
+beach, the Zouave sentinels, the successive anterooms, the lounging
+aids, the good-natured and easy General,--easy by habit and energetic
+by impulse,--all had a certain air of Southern languor, rather
+picturesque, but perhaps not altogether bracing. General Hunter
+received us, that day, with his usual kindliness; there was a good
+deal of pleasant chat; Miles O'Reilly was called in to read his latest
+verses; and then we came to the matter in hand.
+
+Jacksonville, on the St. John's River, in Florida, had been already
+twice taken and twice evacuated; having been occupied by
+Brigadier-General Wright, in March, 1862, and by Brigadier-General
+Brannan, in October of the same year. The second evacuation was by
+Major-General Hunter's own order, on the avowed ground that a garrison
+of five thousand was needed to hold the place, and that this force could
+not be spared. The present proposition was to take and hold it with a
+brigade of less than a thousand men, carrying, however, arms and uniforms
+for twice that number, and a month's rations. The claim was, that there
+were fewer rebel troops in the Department than formerly, and that the
+St. Mary's expedition had shown the advantage possessed by colored
+troops, in local knowledge, and in the confidence of the loyal blacks.
+It was also urged, that it was worth while to risk something, in the
+effort to hold Florida, and perhaps bring it back into the Union.
+
+My chief aim in the negotiation was to get the men into action, and
+that of the Florida Commissioners to get them into Florida. Thus far
+coinciding, we could heartily co-operate; and though General Hunter
+made some reasonable objections, they were yielded more readily than I
+had feared; and finally, before half our logical ammunition was
+exhausted, the desired permission was given, and the thing might be
+considered as done.
+
+We were now to leave, as we supposed forever, the camp which had thus
+far been our home. Our vast amount of surplus baggage made a heavy job
+in the loading, inasmuch as we had no wharf, and everything had to be
+put on board by means of flat-boats. It was completed by twenty-four
+hours of steady work; and after some of the usual uncomfortable delays
+which wait on military expeditions, we were at last afloat.
+
+I had tried to keep the plan as secret as possible, and had requested to
+have no definite orders, until we should be on board ship. But this
+larger expedition was less within my own hands than was the St. Mary's
+affair, and the great reliance for concealment was on certain counter
+reports, ingeniously set afloat by some of the Florida men. These
+reports rapidly swelled into the most enormous tales, and by the time
+they reached the New York newspapers, the expedition was "a great
+volcano about bursting, whose lava will burn, flow, and destroy," "the
+sudden appearance in arms of no less than five thousand negroes," "a
+liberating host," "not the phantom, but the reality, of servile
+insurrection." What the undertaking actually was may be best seen in the
+instructions which guided it.*
+
+* HEAD-QUARTERS, BEAUFORT, S. C.,
+
+March 5, 1863.
+
+COLONEL,--You will please proceed with your command, the First and Second
+Regiments South Carolina Volunteers, which are now embarked upon the
+steamers John Adams, Boston, and Burn-side, to Fernandina, Florida.
+
+Relying upon your military skill and judgment. I shall give you no
+special directions as to your procedure after you leave Fernandina. I
+expect, however, that you will occupy Jacksonville, Florida, and
+intrench yourselves there.
+
+The main objects of your expedition are to carry the proclamation of
+freedom to the enslaved; to call all loyal men into the service of the
+United States; to occupy as much of the State of Florida as possible
+with the forces under your command; and to neglect no means consistent
+with the usages of civilized warfare to weaken, harass, and annoy those
+who are in rebellion against the Government of the United States.
+
+Trusting that the blessing of our Heavenly Father will rest upon your
+noble enterprise,
+
+I am yours, sincerely,
+
+R. SAXTON,
+
+Brig.-Gen., Mil. Gov. Dept. of the South. Colonel Higginson, Comdg.
+Expeditionary Corps.
+
+
+In due time, after touching at Fernandina, we reached the difficult
+bar of the St. John's, and were piloted safely over. Admiral Dupont
+had furnished a courteous letter of introduction.* and we were
+cordially received by Commander Duncan of the Norwich, and Lieutenant
+Watson, commanding the Uncas. Like all officers on blockade duty, they
+were impatient of their enforced inaction, and gladly seized the
+opportunity for a different service. It was some time since they had
+ascended as high as Jacksonville, for their orders were strict, one
+vessel's coal was low, the other was in infirm condition, and there
+were rumors of cotton-clads and torpedoes. But they gladly agreed to
+escort us up the river, so soon as our own armed gunboat, the John
+Adams, should arrive,--she being unaccountably delayed.
+
+FLAG SHIP WABASH,
+
+PORT ROYAL HARBOR, S. C., March 6, 1863. SIR,--I am informed by
+Major-General Hunter that he is sending Colonel Higginson on an
+important mission in the southerly part of his Department.
+
+I have not been made acquainted with the objects of this mission, but
+any assistance that you can offer Colonel Higginson, which will not
+interfere with your other duties, you are authorized to give.
+
+Respectfully your obedient servant,
+
+S. F. DUPONT,
+Rear-Adm. Comdg. S. Atl. Block. Squad.
+
+To the Senior Officer at the different Blockading Stations on the Coast
+of Georgia and Florida.
+
+
+We waited twenty-four hours for her, at the sultry mouth of that glassy
+river, watching the great pelicans which floated lazily on its tide, or
+sometimes shooting one, to admire the great pouch, into which one of the
+soldiers could insert his foot, as into a boot. "He hold one quart,"
+said the admiring experimentalist. "Hi! boy," retorted another quickly,
+"neber you bring dat quart measure in _my_ peck o' corn." The protest
+came very promptly, and was certainly fair; for the strange receptacle
+would have held nearly a gallon.
+
+We went on shore, too, and were shown a rather pathetic little garden,
+which the naval officers had laid out, indulging a dream of vegetables.
+They lingered over the little microscopic sprouts, pointing them out
+tenderly, as if they were cradled babies. I have often noticed this
+touching weakness, in gentlemen of that profession, on lonely stations.
+
+We wandered among the bluffs, too, in the little deserted
+hamlet called "Pilot Town." The ever-shifting sand had in some cases
+almost buried the small houses, and had swept around others a circular
+drift, at a few yards' distance, overtopping then: eaves, and leaving
+each the untouched citadel of this natural redoubt. There was also a
+dismantled lighthouse, an object which always seems the most dreary
+symbol of the barbarism of war, when one considers the national
+beneficence which reared and kindled it. Despite the service rendered by
+this once brilliant light, there were many wrecks which had been strown
+upon the beach, victims of the most formidable of the Southern
+river-bars. As I stood with my foot on the half-buried ribs of one of
+these vessels,--so distinctly traced that one might almost fancy them
+human,--the old pilot, my companion, told me the story of the wreck. The
+vessel had formerly been in the Cuba trade; and her owner, an American
+merchant residing in Havana, had christened her for his young daughter.
+I asked the name, and was startled to recognize that of a favorite young
+cousin of mine, besides the bones of whose representative I was thus
+strangely standing, upon this lonely shore.
+
+It was well to have something to relieve the anxiety naturally felt at
+the delay of the John Adams,--anxiety both for her safety and for the
+success of our enterprise, The Rebels had repeatedly threatened to burn
+the whole of Jacksonville, in case of another attack, as they had
+previously burned its mills and its great hotel. It seemed as if the
+news of our arrival must surely have travelled thirty miles by this
+time. All day we watched every smoke that rose among the wooded hills,
+and consulted the compass and the map, to see if that sign announced the
+doom of our expected home. At the very last moment of the tide, just in
+time to cross the bar that day, the missing vessel arrived; all
+anxieties vanished; I transferred my quarters on board, and at two the
+next morning we steamed up the river.
+
+Again there was the dreamy delight of ascending an unknown stream,
+beneath a sinking moon, into a region where peril made fascination.
+Since the time of the first explorers, I suppose that those Southern
+waters have known no sensations so dreamy and so bewitching as those
+which this war has brought forth. I recall, in this case, the faintest
+sensations of our voyage, as Ponce de Leon may have recalled those of
+his wandering search, in the same soft zone, for the secret of the
+mystic fountain. I remember how, during that night, I looked for the
+first time through a powerful night-glass. It had always seemed a
+thing wholly inconceivable, that a mere lens could change darkness
+into light; and as I turned the instrument on the preceding gunboat,
+and actually discerned the man at the wheel and the others standing
+about him,--all relapsing into vague gloom again at the withdrawal of
+the glass,--it gave a feeling of childish delight. Yet it seemed only
+in keeping with the whole enchantment of the scene; and had I been
+some Aladdin, convoyed by genii or giants, I could hardly have felt
+more wholly a denizen of some world of romance.
+
+But the river was of difficult navigation; and we began to feel
+sometimes, beneath the keel, that ominous, sliding, grating, treacherous
+arrest of motion which makes the heart shudder, as the vessel does.
+There was some solicitude about torpedoes, also,--a peril which became a
+formidable thing, one year later, in the very channel where we found
+none. Soon one of our consorts grounded, then another, every vessel
+taking its turn, I believe, and then in turn getting off, until the
+Norwich lay hopelessly stranded, for that tide at least, a few miles
+below Jacksonville, and out of sight of the city, so that she could not
+even add to our dignity by her visible presence from afar.
+
+This was rather a serious matter, as the Norwich was our main naval
+reliance, the Uncas being a small steamer of less than two hundred
+tons, and in such poor condition that Commander Duncan, on finding
+himself aground, at first quite declined to trust his consort any
+farther alone. But, having got thus far, it was plainly my duty to
+risk the remainder with or without naval assistance; and this being
+so, the courageous officer did not long object, but allowed his
+dashing subordinate to steam up with us to the city. This left us one
+naval and one army gunboat; and, fortunately, the Burn-side, being a
+black propeller, always passed for an armed vessel among the Rebels,
+and we rather encouraged that pleasing illusion.
+
+We had aimed to reach Jacksonville at daybreak; but these mishaps
+delayed us, and we had several hours of fresh, early sunshine,
+lighting up the green shores of that lovely river, wooded to the
+water's edge, with sometimes an emerald meadow, opening a vista to
+some picturesque house,--all utterly unlike anything we had yet seen
+in the South, and suggesting rather the Penobscot or Kennebec. Here
+and there we glided by the ruins of some saw-mill burned by the Rebels
+on General Wright's approach; but nothing else spoke of war, except,
+perhaps, the silence. It was a delicious day, and a scene of
+fascination. Our Florida men were wild with delight; and when we
+rounded the point below the city, and saw from afar its long streets,
+its brick warehouses, its white cottages, and its overshadowing
+trees,--all peaceful and undisturbed by flames,--it seemed, in the
+men's favorite phrase, "too much good," and all discipline was merged,
+for the moment, in a buzz of ecstasy.
+
+The city was still there for us, at any rate; though none knew what
+perils might be concealed behind those quiet buildings. Yet there were
+children playing on the wharves; careless men, here and there, lounged
+down to look at us, hands in pockets; a few women came to their doors,
+and gazed listlessly upon us, shading their eyes with their hands. We
+drew momently nearer, in silence and with breathless attention. The
+gunners were at their posts, and the men in line. It was eight
+o'clock. We were now directly opposite the town: yet no sign of
+danger was seen; not a rifle-shot was heard; not a shell rose hissing
+in the air. The Uncas rounded to, and dropped anchor in the stream; by
+previous agreement, I steamed to an upper pier of the town, Colonel
+Montgomery to a lower one; the little boat-howitzers were run out upon
+the wharves, and presently to the angles of the chief streets; and the
+pretty town was our own without a shot. In spite of our detention, the
+surprise had been complete, and not a soul in Jacksonville had dreamed
+of our coming.
+
+The day passed quickly, in eager preparations for defence; the people
+could or would give us no definite information about the Rebel camp,
+which was, however, known to be near, and our force did not permit our
+going out to surprise it. The night following was the most anxious I
+ever spent. We were all tired out; the companies were under arms, in
+various parts of the town, to be ready for an attack at any moment. My
+temporary quarters were beneath the loveliest grove of linden-trees,
+and as I reclined, half-dozing, the mocking-birds sang all night like
+nightingales,--their notes seeming to trickle down through the sweet
+air from amid the blossoming boughs. Day brought relief and the sense
+of due possession, and we could see what we had won.
+
+Jacksonville was now a United States post again: the only post on the
+main-land in the Department of the South. Before the war it had three
+or four thousand inhabitants, and a rapidly growing lumber-trade, for
+which abundant facilities were evidently provided. The wharves were
+capacious, and the blocks of brick warehouses along the lower street
+were utterly unlike anything we had yet seen in that region, as were
+the neatness and thrift everywhere visible. It had been built up by
+Northern enterprise, and much of the property was owned by loyal men.
+It had been a great resort for invalids, though the Rebels had burned
+the large hotel which once accommodated them. Mills had also been
+burned; but the dwelling-houses were almost all in good condition. The
+quarters for the men were admirable; and I took official possession of
+the handsome brick house of Colonel Sunder-land, the established
+head-quarters through every occupation, whose accommodating flag-staff
+had literally and repeatedly changed its colors. The seceded Colonel,
+reputed author of the State ordinance of Secession, was a New-Yorker
+by birth, and we found his law-card, issued when in practice in
+Easton, Washington County, New York. He certainly had good taste in
+planning the inside of a house, though time had impaired its
+condition. There was a neat office with ample bookcases and no books,
+a billiard-table with no balls, gas-fixtures without gas, and a
+bathing-room without water. There was a separate building for
+servants' quarters, and a kitchen with every convenience, even to a
+few jars of lingering pickles. On the whole, there was an air of
+substance and comfort about the town, quite alien from the picturesque
+decadence of Beaufort.
+
+The town rose gradually from the river, and was bounded on the rear by a
+long, sluggish creek, beyond which lay a stretch of woods, affording an
+excellent covert for the enemy, but without great facilities for attack,
+as there were but two or three fords and bridges. This brook could
+easily be held against a small force, but could at any time and at
+almost any point be readily crossed by a large one. North of the town
+the land rose a little, between the river and the sources of the brook,
+and then sank to a plain, which had been partially cleared by a previous
+garrison. For so small a force as ours, however, this clearing must be
+extended nearer to the town; otherwise our lines would be too long for
+our numbers.
+
+This deficiency in numbers at once became a source of serious anxiety.
+While planning the expedition, it had seemed so important to get the men
+a foothold in Florida that I was willing to risk everything for it. But
+this important post once in our possession, it began to show some
+analogies to the proverbial elephant in the lottery. To hold it
+permanently with nine hundred men was not, perhaps, impossible, with the
+aid of a gunboat (I had left many of my own regiment sick and on duty in
+Beaufort, and Colonel Montgomery had as yet less than one hundred and
+fifty); but to hold it, and also to make forays up the river, certainly
+required a larger number. We came in part to recruit, but had found
+scarcely an able-bodied negro in the city; all had been removed farther
+up, and we must certainly contrive to follow them. I was very unwilling
+to have, as yet, any white troops under my command, with the blacks.
+Finally, however, being informed by Judge S. of a conversation with
+Colonel Hawley, commanding at Fernandina, in which the latter had
+offered to send four companies and a light battery to swell our force,
+--in view of the aid given to his position by this more advanced post, I
+decided to authorize the energetic Judge to go back to Fernandina and
+renew the negotiation, as the John Adams must go thither at any rate for
+coal.
+
+Meanwhile all definite display of our force was avoided; dress-parades
+were omitted; the companies were so distributed as to tell for the
+utmost; and judicious use was made, here and there, of empty tents.
+The gunboats and transports moved impressively up and down the river,
+from time to time. The disposition of pickets was varied each night to
+perplex the enemy, and some advantage taken of his distrust, which
+might be assumed as equalling our own. The citizens were duly
+impressed by our supply of ammunition, which was really enormous, and
+all these things soon took effect. A loyal woman, who came into town,
+said that the Rebel scouts, stopping at her house, reported that there
+were "sixteen hundred negroes all over the woods, and the town full of
+them besides." "It was of no use to go in. General Finnegan had driven
+them into a bad place once, and should not do it again." "They had
+lost their captain and their best surgeon in the first skirmish, and
+if the Savannah people wanted the negroes driven away, they might come
+and do it themselves." Unfortunately, we knew that they could easily
+come from Savannah at any time, as there was railroad communication
+nearly all the way; and every time we heard the steam-whistle, the men
+were convinced of their arrival. Thus we never could approach to any
+certainty as to their numbers, while they could observe, from the
+bluffs, every steamboat that ascended the river.
+
+To render our weak force still more available, we barricaded the
+approaches to the chief streets by constructing barriers or felling
+trees. It went to my heart to sacrifice, for this purpose, several of my
+beautiful lindens; but it was no time for aesthetics. As the giants lay
+on the ground, still scenting the air with their abundant bloom, I used
+to rein up my horse and watch the children playing hide-and-seek amongst
+their branches, or some quiet cow grazing at the foliage. Nothing
+impresses the mind in war like some occasional object or association
+that belongs apparently to peace alone.
+
+Among all these solicitudes, it was a great thing that one particular
+anxiety vanished in a day. On the former expedition the men were upon
+trial as to their courage; now they were to endure another test, as to
+their demeanor as victors. Here were five hundred citizens, nearly all
+white, at the mercy of their former slaves. To some of these whites it
+was the last crowning humiliation, and they were, or professed to be,
+in perpetual fear. On the other hand, the most intelligent and
+lady-like woman I saw, the wife of a Rebel captain, rather surprised
+me by saying that it seemed pleasanter to have these men stationed
+there, whom they had known all their lives, and who had generally
+borne a good character, than to be in the power of entire strangers.
+Certainly the men deserved the confidence, for there was scarcely an
+exception to their good behavior. I think they thoroughly felt that
+their honor and dignity were concerned in the matter, and took too
+much pride in their character as soldiers,--to say nothing of higher
+motives,--to tarnish it by any misdeeds. They watched their officers
+vigilantly and even suspiciously, to detect any disposition towards
+compromise; and so long as we pursued a just course it was evident
+that they could be relied on. Yet the spot was pointed out to me where
+two of our leading men had seen their brothers hanged by Lynch law;
+many of them had private wrongs to avenge; and they all had utter
+disbelief in all pretended loyalty, especially on the part of the
+women.
+
+One citizen alone was brought to me in a sort of escort of honor by
+Corporal Prince Lambkin,--one of the color-guard, and one of our ablest
+men,--the same who had once made a speech in camp, reminding his hearers
+that they had lived under the American flag for eighteen hundred and
+sixty-two years, and ought to live and die under it. Corporal Lambkin
+now introduced his man, a German, with the highest compliment in his
+power, "He hab true colored-man heart." Surrounded by mean, cajoling,
+insinuating white men and women who were all that and worse, I was quite
+ready to appreciate the quality he thus proclaimed. A colored-man heart,
+in the Rebel States, is a fair synonyme for a loyal heart, and it is
+about the only such synonyme. In this case, I found afterwards that the
+man in question, a small grocer, had been an object of suspicion to the
+whites from his readiness to lend money to the negroes, or sell to them
+on credit; in which, perhaps, there may have been some mixture of
+self-interest with benevolence.
+
+I resort to a note-book of that period, well thumbed and pocket-worn,
+which sometimes received a fragment of the day's experience.
+
+
+"March 16, 1863.
+
+"Of course, droll things are constantly occurring. Every white man,
+woman, and child is flattering, seductive, and professes Union
+sentiment; every black ditto believes that every white ditto is a
+scoundrel, and ought to be shot, but for good order and military
+discipline. The Provost Marshal and I steer between them as blandly as
+we can. Such scenes as succeed each other! Rush of indignant Africans.
+A white man, in woman's clothes, has been seen to enter a certain
+house,--undoubtedly a spy. Further evidence discloses the Roman
+Catholic priest, a peaceful little Frenchman, in his professional
+apparel.--Anxious female enters. Some sentinel has shot her cow by
+mistake for a Rebel. The United States cannot think of paying the
+desired thirty dollars. Let her go to the Post-Quartermaster and
+select a cow from his herd. If there is none to suit her (and, indeed,
+not one of them gave a drop of milk,--neither did hers), let her wait
+till the next lot comes in,--that is all.--Yesterday's operations gave
+the following total yield: Thirty 'contrabands,' eighteen horses,
+eleven cattle, ten saddles and bridles, and one new army-wagon. At
+this rate we shall soon be self-supporting _cavalry_.
+
+"Where complaints are made of the soldiers, it almost always turns out
+that the women have insulted them most grossly, swearing at them, and
+the like. One unpleasant old Dutch woman came in, bursting with wrath,
+and told the whole narrative of her blameless life, diversified with
+sobs:--
+
+"'Last January I ran off two of my black people from St. Mary's to
+Fernandina,' (sob,)--'then I moved down there myself, and at Lake City
+I lost six women and a boy,' (sob,)--'then I stopped at Baldwin for
+one of the wenches to be confined,' (sob,)--'then I brought them all
+here to live in a Christian country' (sob, sob). "Then the blockheads'
+[blockades, that is, gunboats] 'came, and they all ran off with the
+blockheads,' (sob, sob, sob,) 'and left me, an old lady of forty-six,
+obliged to work for a living.' (Chaos of sobs, without cessation.)
+
+"But when I found what the old sinner had said to the soldiers I rather
+wondered at their self-control in not throttling her."
+
+Meanwhile skirmishing went on daily in the outskirts of the town. There
+was a fight on the very first day, when our men killed, as before
+hinted, a Rebel surgeon, which was oddly metamorphosed in the Southern
+newspapers into their killing one of ours, which certainly never
+happened. Every day, after this, they appeared in small mounted squads
+in the neighborhood, and exchanged shots with our pickets, to which the
+gunboats would contribute their louder share, their aim being rather
+embarrassed by the woods and hills. We made reconnoissances, too, to
+learn the country in different directions, and were apt to be fired upon
+during these. Along the farther side of what we called the "Debatable
+Land" there was a line of cottages, hardly superior to negro huts, and
+almost all empty, where the Rebel pickets resorted, and from whose
+windows they fired. By degrees all these nests were broken up and
+destroyed, though it cost some trouble to do it, and the hottest
+skirmishing usually took place around them.
+
+Among these little affairs was one which we called "Company K's
+Skirmish," because it brought out the fact that this company, which was
+composed entirely of South Carolina men, and had never shone in drill or
+discipline, stood near the head of the regiment for coolness and
+courage,--the defect of discipline showing itself only in their extreme
+unwillingness to halt when once let loose. It was at this time that the
+small comedy of the Goose occurred,--an anecdote which Wendell Phillips
+has since made his own.
+
+One of the advancing line of skirmishers, usually an active fellow
+enough, was observed to move clumsily and irregularly. It soon
+appeared that he had encountered a fine specimen of the domestic
+goose, which had surrendered at discretion. Not wishing to lose it, he
+could yet find no way to hold it but between his legs; and so he went
+on, loading, firing, advancing, halting, always with the goose
+writhing and struggling and hissing in this natural pair of stocks.
+Both happily came off unwounded, and retired in good order at the
+signal, or some time after it; but I have hardly a cooler thing to put
+on record.
+
+Meanwhile, another fellow left the field less exultingly; for, after a
+thoroughly courageous share in the skirmish, he came blubbering to his
+captain, and said,--"Cappen, make Caesar gib me my cane." It seemed
+that, during some interval of the fighting, he had helped himself to an
+armful of Rebel sugar-cane, such as they all delighted in chewing. The
+Roman hero, during another pause, had confiscated the treasure; whence
+these tears of the returning warrior. I never could accustom myself to
+these extraordinary interminglings of manly and childish attributes.
+
+Our most untiring scout during this period was the chaplain of my
+regiment,--the most restless and daring spirit we had, and now exulting
+in full liberty of action. He it was who was daily permitted to stray
+singly where no other officer would have been allowed to go, so
+irresistible was his appeal, "You know I am only a chaplain." Methinks I
+see our regimental saint, with pistols in belt and a Ballard rifle slung
+on shoulder, putting spurs to his steed, and cantering away down some
+questionable wood-path, or returning with some tale of Rebel haunt
+discovered, or store of foraging. He would track an enemy like an
+Indian, or exhort him, when apprehended, like an early Christian. Some
+of our devout soldiers shook their heads sometimes over the chaplain's
+little eccentricities. "Woffor Mr. Chapman made a preacher for?" said
+one of them, as usual transforming his title into a patronymic. "He's
+_de fightingest more Yankee_ I eber see in all my days."
+
+And the criticism was very natural, though they could not deny that,
+when the hour for Sunday service came, Mr. F. commanded the respect and
+attention of all. That hour never came, however, on our first Sunday in
+Jacksonville; we were too busy and the men too scattered; so the
+chaplain made his accustomed foray beyond the lines instead.
+
+"Is it not Sunday?" slyly asked an unregenerate lieutenant. "Nay," quoth
+his Reverence, waxing fervid; "it is the Day of Judgment"
+
+This reminds me of a raid up the river, conducted by one of our senior
+captains, an enthusiast whose gray beard and prophetic manner always
+took me back to the Fifth-Monarchy men. He was most successful that day,
+bringing back horses, cattle, provisions, and prisoners; and one of the
+latter complained bitterly to me of being held, stating that Captain R.
+had promised him speedy liberty. But that doughty official spurned the
+imputation of such weak blandishments, in this day of triumphant
+retribution.
+
+"Promise him!" said he, "I promised him nothing but the Day of Judgment
+and Periods of Damnation!"
+
+Often since have I rolled beneath my tongue this savory and solemn
+sentence, and I do not believe that since the days of the Long
+Parliament there has been a more resounding anathema.
+
+In Colonel Montgomery's hands these up-river raids reached the dignity
+of a fine art. His conceptions of foraging were rather more Western and
+liberal than mine, and on these excursions he fully indemnified himself
+for any undue abstinence demanded of him when in camp. I remember being
+on the wharf, with some naval officers, when he came down from his first
+trip. The steamer seemed an animated hen-coop. Live poultry hung from
+the foremast shrouds, dead ones from the mainmast, geese hissed from the
+binnacle, a pig paced the quarter-deck, and a duck's wings were seen
+fluttering from a line which was wont to sustain duck trousers. The
+naval heroes, mindful of their own short rations, and taking high views
+of one's duties in a conquered country, looked at me reproachfully, as
+who should say, "Shall these things be?" In a moment or two the
+returning foragers had landed.
+
+"Captain ----," said Montgomery, courteously, "would you allow me to
+send a remarkably fine turkey for your use on board ship?"
+
+"Lieutenant ----," said Major Corwin, "may I ask your acceptance of a
+pair of ducks for your mess?"
+
+Never did I behold more cordial relations between army and navy than
+sprang into existence at those sentences. So true it is, as Charles
+Lamb says, that a single present of game may diffuse kindly sentiments
+through a whole community. These little trips were called "rest";
+there was no other rest during those ten days. An immense amount of
+picket and fatigue duty had to be done. Two redoubts were to be built
+to command the Northern Valley; all the intervening grove, which now
+afforded lurking-ground for a daring enemy, must be cleared away; and
+a few houses must be reluctantly razed for the same purpose. The fort
+on the left was named Fort Higginson, and that built by my own
+regiment, in return, Fort Montgomery. The former was necessarily a
+hasty work, and is now, I believe, in ruins; the latter was far more
+elaborately constructed, on lines well traced by the Fourth New
+Hampshire during the previous occupation. It did great credit to
+Captain Trowbridge, of my regiment (formerly of the New York Volunteer
+Engineers), who had charge of its construction.
+
+How like a dream seems now that period of daily skirmishes and nightly
+watchfulness! The fatigue was so constant that the days hurried by. I
+felt the need of some occasional change of ideas, and having just
+received from the North Mr. Brook's beautiful translation of Jean
+Paul's "Titan," I used to retire to my bedroom for some ten minutes
+every afternoon, and read a chapter or two. It was more refreshing
+than a nap, and will always be to me one of the most fascinating books
+in the world, with this added association. After all, what concerned
+me was not so much the fear of an attempt to drive us out and retake
+the city,--for that would be against the whole policy of the Rebels in
+that region,--as of an effort to fulfil their threats and burn it, by
+some nocturnal dash. The most valuable buildings belonged to Union
+men, and the upper part of the town, built chiefly of resinous pine,
+was combustible to the last degree. In case of fire, if the wind blew
+towards the river, we might lose steamers and all. I remember
+regulating my degree of disrobing by the direction of the wind; if it
+blew from the river, it was safe to make one's self quite comfortable;
+if otherwise, it was best to conform to Suwarrow's idea of luxury, and
+take off one spur.
+
+So passed our busy life for ten days. There were no tidings of
+reinforcements, and I hardly knew whether I wished for them,--or
+rather, I desired them as a choice of evils; for our men were giving
+out from overwork, and the recruiting excursions, for which we had
+mainly come, were hardly possible. At the utmost, I had asked for the
+addition of four companies and a light battery. Judge of my surprise
+when two infantry regiments successively arrived! I must resort to a
+scrap from the diary. Perhaps diaries are apt to be thought tedious;
+but I would rather read a page of one, whatever the events described,
+than any more deliberate narrative,--it gives glimpses so much more
+real and vivid.
+
+
+"HEAD-QUARTERS, JACKSONVILLE,
+
+March 20, 1863, Midnight.
+
+"For the last twenty-four hours we have been sending women and children
+out of town, in answer to a demand by flag of truce, with a threat of
+bombardment. [N. B. I advised them not to go, and the majority declined
+doing so.] It was designed, no doubt, to intimidate; and in our
+ignorance of the force actually outside, we have had to recognize the
+possibility of danger, and work hard at our defences. At any time, by
+going into the outskirts, we can have a skirmish, which is nothing but
+fun; but when night closes in over a small and weary garrison, there
+sometimes steals into my mind, like a chill, that most sickening of all
+sensations, the anxiety of a commander. This was the night generally set
+for an attack, if any, though I am pretty well satisfied that they have
+not strength to dare it, and the worst they could probably do is to burn
+the town. But to-night, instead of enemies, appear friends,--our devoted
+civic ally, Judge S., and a whole Connecticut regiment, the Sixth, under
+Major Meeker; and though the latter are aground, twelve miles below, yet
+they enable one to breathe more freely. I only wish they were black; but
+now I have to show, not only that blacks can fight, but that they and
+white soldiers can act in harmony together."
+
+That evening the enemy came up for a reconnoissance, in the deepest
+darkness, and there were alarms all night. The next day the Sixth
+Connecticut got afloat, and came up the river; and two days after, to
+my continued amazement, arrived a part of the Eighth Maine, under
+Lieutenant-Colonel Twichell. This increased my command to four
+regiments, or parts of regiments, half white and half black.
+Skirmishing had almost ceased,--our defences being tolerably complete,
+and looking from without much more effective than they really were. We
+were safe from any attack by a small force, and hoped that the enemy
+could not spare a large one from Charleston or Savannah. All looked
+bright without, and gave leisure for some small anxieties within.
+
+It was the first time in the war (so far as I know) that white and black
+soldiers had served together on regular duty. Jealousy was still felt
+towards even the officers of colored regiments, and any difficult
+contingency would be apt to bring it out. The white soldiers, just from
+ship-board, felt a natural desire to stray about the town; and no attack
+from an enemy would be so disastrous as the slightest collision between
+them and the black provost-guard. I shudder, even now, to think of the
+train of consequences, bearing on the whole course of subsequent
+national events, which one such mishap might then have produced. It is
+almost impossible for us now to remember in what a delicate balance then
+hung the whole question of negro enlistments, and consequently of
+Slavery. Fortunately for my own serenity, I had great faith in the
+intrinsic power of military discipline, and also knew that a common
+service would soon produce mutual respect among good soldiers; and so it
+proved. But the first twelve hours of this mixed command were to me a
+more anxious period than any outward alarms had created.
+
+Let us resort to the note-book again.
+
+"JACKSONVILLE, March 22, 1863.
+
+"It is Sunday; the bell is ringing for church, and Rev. Mr. F., from
+Beaufort, is to preach. This afternoon our good quartermaster
+establishes a Sunday-school for our little colony of 'contrabands,' now
+numbering seventy.
+
+"Sunday Afternoon. "The bewildering report is confirmed; and in
+addition to the Sixth Connecticut, which came yesterday, appears part
+of the Eighth Maine. The remainder, with its colonel, will be here
+to-morrow, and, report says, Major-General Hunter. Now my hope is that
+we may go to some point higher up the river, which we can hold for
+ourselves. There are two other points [Magnolia and Pilatka], which,
+in themselves, are as favorable as this, and, for getting recruits,
+better. So I shall hope to be allowed to go. To take posts, and then
+let white troops garrison them,--that is my programme.
+
+"What makes the thing more puzzling is, that the Eighth Maine has only
+brought ten days' rations, so that they evidently are not to stay here;
+and yet where they go, or why they come, is a puzzle. Meanwhile we can
+sleep sound o' nights; and if the black and white babies do not quarrel
+and pull hair, we shall do very well."
+
+Colonel Rust, on arriving, said frankly that he knew nothing of the
+plans prevailing in the Department, but that General Hunter was
+certainly coming soon to act for himself; that it had been reported at
+the North, and even at Port Royal, that we had all been captured and
+shot (and, indeed, I had afterwards the pleasure of reading my own
+obituary in a Northern Democratic journal), and that we certainly needed
+reinforcements; that he himself had been sent with orders to carry out,
+so far as possible, the original plans of the expedition; that he
+regarded himself as only a visitor, and should remain chiefly on
+shipboard,--which he did. He would relieve the black provost-guard by a
+white one, if I approved,--which I certainly did. But he said that he
+felt bound to give the chief opportunities of action to the colored
+troops,--which I also approved, and which he carried out, not quite to
+the satisfaction of his own eager and daring officers.
+
+I recall one of these enterprises, out of which we extracted a good
+deal of amusement; it was baptized the Battle of the Clothes-Lines. A
+white company was out scouting in the woods behind the town, with one
+of my best Florida men for a guide; and the captain sent back a
+message that he had discovered a Rebel camp with twenty-two tents,
+beyond a creek, about four miles away; the officers and men had been
+distinctly seen, and it would be quite possible to capture it. Colonel
+Rust at once sent me out with two hundred men to do the work,
+recalling the original scouts, and disregarding the appeals of his own
+eager officers. We marched through the open pine woods, on a
+delightful afternoon, and met the returning party. Poor fellows! I
+never shall forget the longing eyes they cast on us, as we marched
+forth to the field of glory, from which they were debarred. We went
+three or four miles out, sometimes halting to send forward a scout,
+while I made all the men lie down in the long, thin grass and beside
+the fallen trees, till one could not imagine that there was a person
+there. I remember how picturesque the effect was, when, at the signal,
+all rose again, like Roderick Dhu's men, and the green wood appeared
+suddenly populous with armed life. At a certain point forces were
+divided, and a detachment was sent round the head of the creek, to
+flank the unsuspecting enemy; while we of the main body, stealing with
+caution nearer and nearer, through ever denser woods, swooped down at
+last in triumph upon a solitary farmhouse,--where the family-washing
+had been hung out to dry! This was the "Rebel camp"!
+
+It is due to Sergeant Greene, my invaluable guide, to say that he had
+from the beginning discouraged any high hopes of a crossing of
+bayonets. He had early explained that it was not he who claimed to
+have seen the tents and the Rebel soldiers, but one of the
+officers,--and had pointed out that our undisturbed approach was
+hardly reconcilable with the existence of a hostile camp so near. This
+impression had also pressed more and more upon my own mind, but it was
+our business to put the thing beyond a doubt. Probably the place may
+have been occasionally used for a picket-station, and we found fresh
+horse-tracks in the vicinity, and there was a quantity of iron
+bridle-bits in the house, of which no clear explanation could be
+given; so that the armed men may not have been wholly imaginary. But
+camp there was none. After enjoying to the utmost the fun of the
+thing, therefore, we borrowed the only horse on the premises, hung all
+the bits over his neck, and as I rode him back to camp, they clanked
+like broken chains. We were joined on the way by our dear and devoted
+surgeon, whom I had left behind as an invalid, but who had mounted his
+horse and ridden out alone to attend to our wounded, his green sash
+looking quite in harmony with the early spring verdure of those lovely
+woods. So came we back in triumph, enjoying the joke all the more
+because some one else was responsible. We mystified the little
+community at first, but soon let out the secret, and witticisms
+abounded for a day or two, the mildest of which was the assertion that
+the author of the alarm must have been "three sheets in the wind."
+
+Another expedition was of more exciting character. For several days
+before the arrival of Colonel Rust a reconnois-sance had been planned in
+the direction of the enemy's camp, and he finally consented to its being
+carried out. By the energy of Major Corwin, of the Second South Carolina
+Volunteers, aided by Mr. Holden, then a gunner on the Paul Jones, and
+afterwards made captain of the same regiment, one of the ten-pound
+Parrott guns had been mounted on a hand-car, for use on the railway.
+This it was now proposed to bring into service. I took a large detail of
+men from the two white regiments and from my own, and had instructions
+to march as far as the four-mile station on the railway, if possible,
+examine the country, and ascertain if the Rebel camp had been removed,
+as was reported, beyond that distance. I was forbidden going any farther
+from camp, or attacking the Rebel camp, as my force comprised half our
+garrison, and should the town meanwhile be attacked from some other
+direction, it would be in great danger.
+
+I never shall forget the delight of that march through the open pine
+barren, with occasional patches of uncertain swamp. The Eighth Maine,
+under Lieutenant-Colonel Twich-ell, was on the right, the Sixth
+Connecticut, under Major Meeker, on the left, and my own men, under
+Major Strong, in the centre, having in charge the cannon, to which
+they had been trained. Mr. Heron, from the John Adams, acted as
+gunner. The mounted Rebel pickets retired before us through the woods,
+keeping usually beyond range of the skirmishers, who in a long
+line--white, black, white--were deployed transversely. For the first
+time I saw the two colors fairly alternate on the military chessboard;
+it had been the object of much labor and many dreams, and I liked the
+pattern at last. Nothing was said about the novel fact by anybody,--it
+all seemed to come as matter-of-course; there appeared to be no mutual
+distrust among the men, and as for the officers, doubtless "each crow
+thought its own young the whitest,"--I certainly did, although doing
+full justice to the eager courage of the Northern portion of my
+command. Especially I watched with pleasure the fresh delight of the
+Maine men, who had not, like the rest, been previously in action, and
+who strode rapidly on with their long legs, irresistibly recalling, as
+their gaunt, athletic frames and sunburnt faces appeared here and
+there among the pines, the lumber regions of their native State, with
+which I was not unfamiliar.
+
+We passed through a former camp of the Rebels, from which everything had
+been lately removed; but when the utmost permitted limits of our
+reconnoissance were reached, there were still no signs of any other
+camp, and the Rebel cavalry still kept provokingly before us. Their
+evident object was to lure us on to their own stronghold, and had we
+fallen into the trap, it would perhaps have resembled, on a smaller
+scale, the Olustee of the following year. With a good deal of
+reluctance, however, I caused the recall to be sounded, and, after a
+slight halt, we began to retrace our steps.
+
+Straining our eyes to look along the reach of level railway which
+stretched away through the pine barren, we began to see certain
+ominous puffs of smoke, which might indeed proceed from some fire in
+the woods, but were at once set down by the men as coming from the
+mysterious locomotive battery which the Rebels were said to have
+constructed. Gradually the smoke grew denser, and appeared to be
+moving up along the track, keeping pace with our motion, and about two
+miles distant. I watched it steadily through a field-glass from our
+own slowly moving battery: it seemed to move when we moved and to halt
+when we halted. Sometimes in the dun smoke I caught a glimpse of
+something blacker, raised high in the air like the threatening head of
+some great gliding serpent. Suddenly there came a sharp puff of
+lighter smoke that seemed like a forked tongue, and then a hollow
+report, and we could see a great black projectile hurled into the air,
+and falling a quarter of a mile away from us, in the woods. I did not
+at once learn that this first shot killed two of the Maine men, and
+wounded two more. This was fired wide, but the numerous shots which
+followed were admirably aimed, and seldom failed to fall or explode
+close to our own smaller battery.
+
+It was the first time that the men had been seriously exposed to
+artillery fire,--a danger more exciting to the ignorant mind than any
+other, as this very war has shown.* So I watched them anxiously.
+Fortunately there were deep trenches on each side the railway, with many
+stout, projecting roots, forming very tolerable bomb-proofs for those
+who happened to be near them. The enemy's gun was a sixty-four-pound
+Blakely, as we afterward found, whose enormous projectile moved very
+slowly and gave ample time to cover,--insomuch, that, while the
+fragments of shell fell all around and amongst us, not a man was hurt.
+This soon gave the men the most buoyant confidence, and they shouted
+with childish delight over every explosion.
+
+*Take this for example: "The effect was electrical. The Rebels were the
+best men in Ford's command, being Lieutenant-Colonel Showalter's
+Californians, and they are brave men. They had dismounted and sent their
+horses to the rear, and were undoubtedly determined upon a desperate
+fight, and their superior numbers made them confident of success. But
+they never fought with artillery, and a cannon has more terror for them
+than ten thousand rifles and all the wild Camanches on the plains of
+Texas. At first glimpse of the shining brass monsters there was a
+visible wavering in the determined front of the enemy, and as the shells
+came screaming over their heads the scare was complete. They broke
+ranks, fled for their horses, scrambled on the first that came to hand,
+and skedaddled in the direction of Brownsville."_New York Evening Post_,
+September 25, 1864.
+
+The moment a shell had burst or fallen unburst, our little gun was
+invariably fired in return, and that with some precision, so far as we
+could judge, its range also being nearly as great. For some reason they
+showed no disposition to overtake us, in which attempt their locomotive
+would have given them an immense advantage over our heavy hand-car, and
+their cavalry force over our infantry. Nevertheless, I rather hoped that
+they would attempt it, for then an effort might have been made to cut
+them off in the rear by taking up some rails. As it was, this was out of
+the question, though they moved slowly, as we moved, keeping always
+about two miles away. When they finally ceased firing we took up the
+rails beyond us before withdrawing, and thus kept the enemy from
+approaching so near the city again. But I shall never forget that
+Dantean monster, rearing its black head amid the distant smoke, nor the
+solicitude with which I watched for the puff which meant danger, and
+looked round to see if my chickens were all under cover. The greatest
+peril, after all, was from the possible dismounting of our gun, in which
+case we should have been very apt to lose it, if the enemy had showed
+any dash. There may be other such tilts of railway artillery on record
+during the war; but if so, I have not happened to read of them, and so
+have dwelt the longer on this.
+
+This was doubtless the same locomotive battery which had previously
+fired more than once upon the town,--running up within two miles and then
+withdrawing, while it was deemed inexpedient to destroy the railroad, on
+our part, lest it might be needed by ourselves in turn. One night, too,
+the Rebel threat had been fulfilled, and they had shelled the town with
+the same battery. They had the range well, and every shot fell near the
+post headquarters. It was exciting to see the great Blakely shell,
+showing a light as it rose, and moving slowly towards us like a comet,
+then exploding and scattering its formidable fragments. Yet, strange to
+say, no serious harm was done to life or limb, and the most formidable
+casualty was that of a citizen who complained that a shell had passed
+through the wall of his bedroom, and carried off his mosquito curtain in
+its transit.
+
+Little knew we how soon these small entertainments would be over.
+Colonel Montgomery had gone up the river with his two companies,
+perhaps to remain permanently; and I was soon to follow. On Friday,
+March 27th, I wrote home: "The Burnside has gone to Beaufort for
+rations, and the John Adams to Fernandina for coal; we expect both
+back by Sunday, and on Monday I hope to get the regiment off to a
+point farther up,--Magnolia, thirty-five miles, or Pilatka,
+seventy-five,--either of which would be a good post for us. General
+Hunter is expected every day, and it is strange he has not come." The
+very next day came an official order recalling the whole expedition,
+and for the third time evacuating Jacksonville.
+
+A council of military and naval officers was at once called (though
+there was but one thing to be done), and the latter were even more
+disappointed and amazed than the former. This was especially the case
+with the senior naval officer, Captain Steedman, a South-Carolinian by
+birth, but who had proved himself as patriotic as he was courteous and
+able, and whose presence and advice had been of the greatest value to
+me. He and all of us felt keenly the wrongfulness of breaking the
+pledges which we had been authorized to make to these people, and of
+leaving them to the mercy of the Rebels once more. Most of the people
+themselves took the same view, and eagerly begged to accompany us on our
+departure. They were allowed to bring their clothing and furniture also,
+and at once developed that insane mania for aged and valueless trumpery
+which always seizes upon the human race, I believe, in moments of
+danger. With the greatest difficulty we selected between the essential
+and the non-essential, and our few transports were at length loaded to
+the very water's edge on the morning of March 29th,--Colonel Montgomery
+having by this time returned from up-river, with sixteen prisoners, and
+the fruits of foraging in plenty.
+
+And upon that last morning occurred an act on the part of some of the
+garrison most deeply to be regretted, and not to be excused by the
+natural indignation at then- recall,--an act which, through the
+unfortunate eloquence of one newspaper correspondent, rang through the
+nation,--the attempt to burn the town. I fortunately need not dwell
+much upon it, as I was not at the time in command of the post,--as the
+white soldiers frankly took upon themselves the whole
+responsibility,--and as all the fires were made in the wooden part of
+the city, which was occupied by them, while none were made in the
+brick part, where the colored soldiers were quartered. It was
+fortunate for our reputation that the newspaper accounts generally
+agreed in exculpating us from all share in the matter;* and the single
+exception, which one correspondent asserted, I could never verify, and
+do not believe to have existed. It was stated by Colonel Rust, in his
+official report, that some twenty-five buildings in all were burned,
+and I doubt if the actual number was greater; but this was probably
+owing in part to a change of wind, and did not diminish the discredit
+of the transaction. It made our sorrow at departure no less, though it
+infinitely enhanced the impressiveness of the scene.
+
+*"The colored regiments had nothing at all to do with it; they behaved
+with propriety throughout" _Boston Journal_ Correspondence. ("Carleton.")
+
+"The negro troops took no part whatever in the perpetration of this
+Vandalism."_New York Tribune_ Correspondence. ("N. P.")
+
+"We know not whether we are most rejoiced or saddened to observe, by the
+general concurrence of accounts, that the negro soldiers had nothing to
+do with the barbarous act" _Boston Journal_ Editorial, April 10, 1863.
+
+
+The excitement of the departure was intense. The embarkation was so
+laborious that it seemed as if the flames must be upon us before we
+could get on board, and it was also generally expected that the Rebel
+skirmishers would be down among the houses, wherever practicable, to
+annoy us to the utmost, as had been the case at the previous evacuation.
+They were, indeed, there, as we afterwards heard, but did not venture to
+molest us. The sight and roar of the flames, and the rolling clouds of
+smoke, brought home to the impressible minds of the black soldiers all
+their favorite imagery of the Judgment-Day; and those who were not too
+much depressed by disappointment were excited by the spectacle, and sang
+and exhorted without ceasing.
+
+With heavy hearts their officers floated down the lovely river, which we
+had ascended with hopes so buoyant; and from that day to this, the
+reasons for our recall have never been made public. It was commonly
+attributed to proslavery advisers, acting on the rather impulsive nature
+of Major-General Hunter, with a view to cut short the career of the
+colored troops, and stop their recruiting. But it may have been simply
+the scarcity of troops in the Department, and the renewed conviction at
+head-quarters that we were too few to hold the post alone. The latter
+theory was strengthened by the fact that, when General Seymour
+reoccupied Jacksonville, the following year, he took with him twenty
+thousand men instead of one thousand,--and the sanguinary battle of
+Olustee found him with too few.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 5
+Out on Picket
+
+
+One can hardly imagine a body of men more disconsolate than a regiment
+suddenly transferred from an adventurous life in the enemy's country
+to the quiet of a sheltered camp, on safe and familiar ground. The men
+under my command were deeply dejected when, on a most appropriate
+day,--the First of April, 1863,--they found themselves unaccountably
+recalled from Florida, that region of delights which had seemed theirs
+by the right of conquest. My dusky soldiers, who based their whole
+walk and conversation strictly on the ancient Israelites, felt that
+the prophecies were all set at naught, and that they were on the wrong
+side of the Red Sea; indeed, I fear they regarded even me as a sort of
+reversed Moses, whose Pisgah fronted in the wrong direction. Had they
+foreseen how the next occupation of the Promised Land was destined to
+result, they might have acquiesced with more of their wonted
+cheerfulness. As it was, we were very glad to receive, after a few
+days of discontented repose on the very ground where we had once been
+so happy, an order to go out on picket at Port Royal Ferry, with the
+understanding that we might remain there for some time. This picket
+station was regarded as a sort of military picnic by the regiments
+stationed at Beaufort, South Carolina; it meant blackberries and
+oysters, wild roses and magnolias, flowery lanes instead of sandy
+barrens, and a sort of guerilla existence in place of the camp
+routine. To the colored soldiers especially, with their love of
+country life, and their extensive personal acquaintance on the
+plantations, it seemed quite like a Christmas festival. Besides, they
+would be in sight of the enemy, and who knew but there might, by the
+blessing of Providence, be a raid or a skirmish? If they could not
+remain on the St. John's River, it was something to dwell on the
+Coosaw. In the end they enjoyed it as much as they expected, and
+though we "went out" several times subsequently, until it became an
+old story, the enjoyment never waned. And as even the march from the
+camp to the picket lines was something that could not possibly have
+been the same for any white regiment in the service, it is worth while
+to begin at the beginning and describe it.
+
+A regiment ordered on picket was expected to have reveille at daybreak,
+and to be in line for departure by sunrise. This delighted our men, who
+always took a childlike pleasure in being out of bed at any unreasonable
+hour; and by the time I had emerged, the tents were nearly all struck,
+and the great wagons were lumbering into camp to receive them, with
+whatever else was to be transported. The first rays of the sun must fall
+upon the line of these wagons, moving away across the wide
+parade-ground, followed by the column of men, who would soon outstrip
+them. But on the occasion which I especially describe the sun was
+shrouded, and, when once upon the sandy plain, neither camp nor town nor
+river could be seen in the dimness; and when I rode forward and looked
+back there was only visible the long, moving, shadowy column, seeming
+rather awful in its snake-like advance. There was a swaying of flags and
+multitudinous weapons that might have been camels' necks for all one
+could see, and the whole thing might have been a caravan upon the
+desert. Soon we debouched upon the "Shell Road," the wagon-train drew on
+one side into the fog, and by the time the sun appeared the music
+ceased, the men took the "route step," and the fun began.
+
+The "route step" is an abandonment of all military strictness, and
+nothing is required of the men but to keep four abreast, and not lag
+behind. They are not required to keep step, though, with the rhythmical
+ear of our soldiers, they almost always instinctively did so; talking
+and singing are allowed, and of this privilege, at least, they eagerly
+availed themselves. On this day they were at the top of exhilaration.
+There was one broad grin from one end of the column to the other; it
+might soon have been a caravan of elephants instead of camels, for the
+ivory and the blackness; the chatter and the laughter almost drowned the
+tramp of feet and the clatter of equipments. At cross-roads and
+plantation gates the colored people thronged to see us pass; every one
+found a friend and a greeting. "How you do, aunty?" "Huddy (how d'ye),
+Budder Benjamin?" "How you find yourself dis mor-nin', Tittawisa (Sister
+Louisa)?" Such saluations rang out to everybody, known or unknown. In
+return, venerable, kerchiefed matrons courtesied laboriously to every
+one, with an unfailing "Bress de Lord, budder." Grave little boys,
+blacker than ink, shook hands with our laughing and utterly unmanageable
+drummers, who greeted them with this sure word of prophecy, "Dem's de
+drummers for de nex' war!" Pretty mulatto girls ogled and coquetted, and
+made eyes, as Thackeray would say, at half the young fellows in the
+battalion. Meantime the singing was brisk along the whole column, and
+when I sometimes reined up to see them pass, the chant of each company,
+entering my ear, drove out from the other ear the strain of the
+preceding. Such an odd mixture of things, military and missionary, as
+the successive waves of song drifted byl First, "John Brown," of course;
+then, "What make old Satan for follow me so?" then, "Marching Along";
+then, "Hold your light on Canaan's shore"; then, "When this cruel war is
+over" (a new favorite, sung by a few); yielding presently to a grand
+burst of the favorite marching song among them all, and one at which
+every step instinctively quickened, so light and jubilant its rhythm,--
+
+ "All true children gwine in de wilderness,
+ Gwine in de wilderness, gwine in de wilderness,
+ True believers gwine in de wilderness,
+ To take away de sins ob de world,"--
+
+ending in a "Hoigh!" after each verse,--a sort of Irish yell. For all
+the songs, but especially for their own wild hymns, they constantly
+improvised simple verses, with the same odd mingling,--the little
+facts of to-day's march being interwoven with the depths of
+theological gloom, and the same jubilant chorus annexed to all;
+thus,--
+
+ "We're gwin to de Ferry,
+ De bell done ringing;
+ Gwine to de landing,
+ De bell done ringing;
+ Trust, believer
+ O, de bell done ringing;
+ Satan's behind me,
+ De bell done ringing;
+ 'T is a misty morning,
+ De bell done ringing;
+ O de road am sandy,
+ De bell done ringing;
+ Hell been open,
+ De bell done ringing";--
+
+and so on indefinitely.
+
+The little drum-corps kept in advance, a jolly crew, their drums slung
+on their backs, and the drum-sticks perhaps balanced on their heads.
+With them went the officers' servant-boys, more uproarious still,
+always ready to lend their shrill treble to any song. At the head of
+the whole force there walked, by some self-imposed pre-eminence, a
+respectable elderly female, one of the company laundresses, whose
+vigorous stride we never could quite overtake, and who had an enormous
+bundle balanced on her head, while she waved in her hand, like a
+sword, a long-handled tin dipper. Such a picturesque medley of fun,
+war, and music I believe no white regiment in the service could have
+shown; and yet there was no straggling, and a single tap of the drum
+would at any moment bring order out of this seeming chaos. So we
+marched our seven miles out upon the smooth and shaded road,--beneath
+jasmine clusters, and great pine-cones dropping, and great bunches of
+misletoe still in bloom among the branches. Arrived at the station,
+the scene soon became busy and more confused; wagons were being
+unloaded, tents pitched, water brought, wood cut, fires made, while
+the "field and staff" could take possession of the abandoned quarters
+of their predecessors, and we could look round in the lovely summer
+morning to "survey our empire and behold our home."
+
+The only thoroughfare by land between Beaufort and Charleston is the
+"Shell Road," a beautiful avenue, which, about nine miles from Beaufort,
+strikes a ferry across the Coosaw River. War abolished the ferry, and
+made the river the permanent barrier between the opposing picket lines.
+For ten miles, right and left, these lines extended, marked by well-worn
+footpaths, following the endless windings of the stream; and they never
+varied until nearly the end of the war. Upon their maintenance depended
+our whole foothold on the Sea Islands; and upon that again finally
+depended the whole campaign of Sherman. But for the services of the
+colored troops, which finally formed the main garrison of the Department
+of the South, the Great March would never have been performed.
+
+There was thus a region ten or twelve miles square of which I had
+exclusive military command. It was level, but otherwise broken and
+bewildering to the last degree. No road traversed it, properly
+speaking, but the Shell Road. All the rest was a wild medley of
+cypress swamp, pine barren, muddy creek, and cultivated plantation,
+intersected by interminable lanes and bridle-paths, through which we
+must ride day and night, and which our horses soon knew better than
+ourselves. The regiment was distributed at different stations, the
+main force being under my immediate command, at a plantation close by
+the Shell Road, two miles from the ferry, and seven miles from
+Beaufort. Our first picket duty was just at the time of the first
+attack on Charleston, under Dupont and Hunter; and it was generally
+supposed that the Confederates would make an effort to recapture the
+Sea Islands. My orders were to watch the enemy closely, keep informed
+as to his position and movements, attempt no advance, and, in case any
+were attempted from the other side, to delay it as long as possible,
+sending instant notice to head-quarters. As to the delay, that could
+be easily guaranteed. There were causeways on the Shell Road which a
+single battery could hold against a large force; and the plantations
+were everywhere so intersected by hedges and dikes that they seemed
+expressly planned for defence. Although creeks wound in and out
+everywhere, yet these were only navigable at high tide, and at all
+other times were impassable marshes. There were but few posts where
+the enemy were within rifle range, and their occasional attacks at
+those points were soon stopped by our enforcement of a pithy order
+from General Hunter, "Give them as good as they send." So that, with
+every opportunity for being kept on the alert, there was small
+prospect of serious danger; and all promised an easy life, with only
+enough of care to make it pleasant. The picket station was therefore
+always a coveted post among the regiments, combining some undeniable
+importance with a kind of relaxation; and as we were there three
+months on our first tour of duty, and returned there several times
+afterwards, we got well acquainted with it. The whole region always
+reminded me of the descriptions of La Vende'e, and I always expected
+to meet Henri Larochejaquelein riding in the woods.
+
+How can I ever describe the charm and picturesqueness of that summer
+life? Our house possessed four spacious rooms and a _piazza_; around
+it were grouped sheds and tents; the camp was a little way off on one
+side, the negro-quarters of the plantation on the other; and all was
+immersed in a dense mass of waving and murmuring locust-blossoms. The
+spring days were always lovely, while the evenings were always
+conveniently damp; so that we never shut the windows by day, nor
+omitted our cheerful fire by night. Indoors, the main head-quarters
+seemed like the camp of some party of young engineers in time of
+peace, only with a little female society added, and a good many
+martial associations thrown in. A large, low, dilapidated room, with
+an immense fireplace, and with window-panes chiefly broken, so that
+the sashes were still open even when closed,--such was our home. The
+walls were scrawled with capital charcoal sketches by R. of the Fourth
+New Hampshire, and with a good map of the island and its wood-paths by
+C. of the First Massachusetts Cavalry. The room had the
+picturesqueness which comes everywhere from the natural grouping of
+articles of daily use,--swords, belts, pistols, rifles, field-glasses,
+spurs, canteens, gauntlets,--while wreaths of gray moss above the
+windows, and a pelican's wing three feet long over the high
+mantel-piece, indicated more deliberate decoration. This, and the
+whole atmosphere of the place, spoke of the refining presence of
+agreeable women; and it was pleasant when they held their little court
+in the evening, and pleasant all day, with the different visitors who
+were always streaming in and out,--officers and soldiers on various
+business; turbaned women from the plantations, coming with complaints
+or questionings; fugitives from the main-land to be interrogated;
+visitors riding up on horseback, their hands full of jasmine and wild
+roses; and the sweet sunny air all perfumed with magnolias and the
+Southern pine. From the neighboring camp there was a perpetual low
+hum. Louder voices and laughter re-echoed, amid the sharp sounds of
+the axe, from the pine woods; and sometimes, when the relieved pickets
+were discharging their pieces, there came the hollow sound of dropping
+rifle-shots, as in skirmishing,--perhaps the most unmistakable and
+fascinating association that war bequeaths to the memory of the ear.
+
+Our domestic arrangements were of the oddest description. From the
+time when we began housekeeping by taking down the front-door to
+complete therewith a little office for the surgeon on the _piazza_,
+everything seemed upside down. I slept on a shelf in the corner of the
+parlor, bequeathed me by Major F., my jovial predecessor, and, if I
+waked at any time, could put my head through the broken window, arouse
+my orderly, and ride off to see if I could catch a picket asleep. We
+used to spell the word _picquet_, because that was understood to be
+the correct thing, in that Department at least; and they used to say
+at post head-quarters that as soon as the officer in command of the
+outposts grew negligent, and was guilty of a _k_, he was ordered in
+immediately. Then the arrangements for ablution were peculiar. We
+fitted up a bathing-place in a brook, which somehow got appropriated
+at once by the company laundresses; but I had my revenge, for I took
+to bathing in the family washtub. After all, however, the kitchen
+department had the advantage, for they used my solitary napkin to wipe
+the mess-table. As for food, we found it impossible to get chickens,
+save in the immature shape of eggs; fresh pork was prohibited by the
+surgeon, and other fresh meat came rarely. We could, indeed, hunt for
+wild turkeys, and even deer, but such hunting was found only to
+increase the appetite, without corresponding supply. Still we had our
+luxuries,--large, delicious drum-fish, and alligator steaks,--like a
+more substantial fried halibut,--which might have afforded the theme
+for Charles Lamb's dissertation on Roast Pig, and by whose aid "for
+the first time in our lives we tested _crackling_" The post bakery
+yielded admirable bread; and for vegetables and fruit we had very poor
+sweet potatoes, and (in their season) an unlimited supply of the
+largest blackberries. For beverage, we had the vapid milk of that
+region, in which, if you let it stand, the water sinks instead of the
+cream's rising; and the delicious sugar-cane syrup, which we had
+brought from Florida, and which we drank at all hours. Old Floridians
+say that no one is justified in drinking whiskey, while he can get
+cane-juice; it is sweet and spirited, without cloying, foams like ale,
+and there were little spots on the ceiling of the dining-room where
+our lively beverage had popped out its cork. We kept it in a
+whiskey-bottle; and as whiskey itself was absolutely prohibited among
+us, it was amusing to see the surprise of our military visitors when
+this innocent substitute was brought in. They usually liked it in the
+end, but, like the old Frenchwoman over her glass of water, wished
+that it were a sin to give it a relish. As the foaming beakers of
+molasses and water were handed round, the guests would make with them
+the courteous little gestures of polite imbiding, and would then quaff
+the beverage, some with gusto, others with a slight afterlook of
+dismay. But it was a delicious and cooling drink while it
+lasted; and at all events was the best and the worst we had.
+
+We used to have reveille at six, and breakfast about seven; then the
+mounted couriers began to arrive from half a dozen different
+directions, with written reports of what had happened during the
+night,--a boat seen, a picket fired upon, a battery erecting. These
+must be consolidated and forwarded to head-quarters, with the daily
+report of the command,--so many sick, so many on detached service, and
+all the rest. This was our morning newspaper, our Herald and Tribune;
+I never got tired of it. Then the couriers must be furnished with
+countersign and instructions, and sent off again. Then we scattered to
+our various rides, all disguised as duty; one to inspect pickets, one
+to visit a sick soldier, one to build a bridge or clear a road, and
+still another to head-quarters for ammunition or commissary stores.
+Galloping through green lanes, miles of triumphal arches of wild
+roses,--roses pale and large and fragrant, mingled with great boughs
+of the white cornel, fantastic masses, snowy surprises,--such were our
+rides, ranging from eight to fifteen and even twenty miles. Back to a
+late dinner with our various experiences, and perhaps specimens to
+match,--a thunder-snake, eight feet long; a live opossum, with a young
+clinging to the natural pouch; an armful of great white, scentless
+pond-lilies. After dinner, to the tangled garden for rosebuds or early
+magnolias, whose cloying fragrance will always bring back to me the
+full zest of those summer days; then dress-parade and a little drill
+as the day grew cool. In the evening, tea; and then the piazza or the
+fireside, as the case might be,--chess, cards,--perhaps a little
+music by aid of the assistant surgeon's melodeon, a few pages of Jean
+Paul's "Titan," almost my only book, and carefully husbanded,--perhaps
+a mail, with its infinite felicities. Such was our day.
+
+Night brought its own fascinations, more solitary and profound. The
+darker they were, the more clearly it was our duty to visit the pickets.
+The paths that had grown so familiar by day seemed a wholly new
+labyrinth by night; and every added shade of darkness seemed to shift
+and complicate them all anew, till at last man's skill grew utterly
+baffled, and the clew must be left to the instinct of the horse. Riding
+beneath the solemn starlight, or soft, gray mist, or densest blackness,
+the frogs croaking, the strange "chuckwuts-widow" droning his ominous
+note above my head, the mocking-bird dreaming in music, the great
+Southern fireflies rising to the tree-tops, or hovering close to the
+ground like glowworms, till the horse raised his hoofs to avoid them;
+through pine woods and cypress swamps, or past sullen brooks, or white
+tents, or the dimly seen huts of sleeping negroes; down to the
+glimmering shore, where black statues leaned against trees or stood
+alert in the pathways;--never, in all the days of my life, shall I forget
+the magic of those haunted nights.
+
+We had nocturnal boat service, too, for it was a part of our
+instructions to obtain all possible information about the enemy's
+position; and we accordingly, as usual in such cases, incurred a great
+many risks that harmed nobody, and picked up much information which did
+nobody any good. The centre of these nightly reconnoissances, for a long
+time, was the wreck of the George Washington, the story of whose
+disaster is perhaps worth telling.
+
+Till about the time when we went on picket, it had been the occasional
+habit of the smaller gunboats to make the circuit of Port Royal
+Island,--a practice which was deemed very essential to the safety of
+our position, but which the Rebels effectually stopped, a few days
+after our arrival, by destroying the army gunboat George Washington
+with a single shot from a light battery. I was roused soon after
+daybreak by the firing, and a courier soon came dashing in with the
+particulars. Forwarding these hastily to Beaufort (for we had then no
+telegraph), I was soon at the scene of action, five miles away.
+Approaching, I met on the picket paths man after man who had escaped
+from the wreck across a half-mile of almost impassable marsh. Never
+did I see such objects,--some stripped to their shirts, some fully
+clothed, but all having every garment literally pasted to then- bodies
+with mud. Across the river, the Rebels were retiring, having done
+their work, but were still shelling, from greater and greater
+distances, the wood through which I rode. Arrived at the spot nearest
+the wreck (a point opposite to what we called the Brickyard Station),
+I saw the burning vessel aground beyond a long stretch of marsh, out
+of which the forlorn creatures were still floundering. Here and there
+in the mud and reeds we could see the laboring heads, slowly
+advancing, and could hear excruciating cries from wounded men in the
+more distant depths. It was the strangest mixture of war and Dante and
+Robinson Crusoe. Our energetic chaplain coming up, I sent him with
+four men, under a flag of truce, to the place whence the worst cries
+proceeded, while I went to another part of the marsh. During that
+morning we got them all out, our last achievement being the rescue of
+the pilot, an immense negro with a wooden leg,--an article so
+particularly unavailable for mud travelling, that it would have almost
+seemed better, as one of the men suggested, to cut the traces, and
+leave it behind.
+
+A naval gunboat, too, which had originally accompanied this vessel, and
+should never have left it, now came back and took off the survivors,
+though there had been several deaths from scalding and shell. It proved
+that the wreck was not aground after all, but at anchor, having
+foolishly lingered till after daybreak, and having thus given time for
+the enemy to bring down then: guns. The first shot had struck the
+boiler, and set the vessel on fire; after which the officer in command
+had raised a white flag, and then escaped with his men to our shore; and
+it was for this flight in the wrong direction that they were shelled in
+the marshes by the Rebels. The case furnished in this respect some
+parallel to that of the Kearsage and Alabama, and it was afterwards
+cited, I believe, officially or unofficially, to show that the Rebels
+had claimed the right to punish, in this case, the course of action
+which they approved in Semmes. I know that they always asserted
+thenceforward that the detachment on board the George Washington had
+become rightful prisoners of war, and were justly fired upon when they
+tried to escape.
+
+This was at the tune of the first attack on Charleston, and the noise of
+this cannonading spread rapidly thither, and brought four regiments to
+reinforce Beaufort in a hurry, under the impression that the town was
+already taken, and that they must save what remnants they could. General
+Saxton, too, had made such capital plans for defending the
+post that he could not bear not to have it attacked; so, while the
+Rebels brought down a force to keep us from taking the guns off the
+wreck, I was also supplied with a section or two of regular artillery,
+and some additional infantry, with which to keep them from it; and we
+tried to "make believe very hard," and rival the Charleston expedition
+on our own island. Indeed, our affair came to about as much,--nearly
+nothing,--and lasted decidedly longer; for both sides nibbled away at
+the guns, by night, for weeks afterward, though I believe the mud
+finally got them,--at least, we did not. We tried in vain to get the use
+of a steamboat or floating derrick of any kind; for it needed more
+mechanical ingenuity than we possessed to transfer anything so heavy to
+our small boats by night, while by day we did not go near the wreck in
+anything larger than a "dug-out."
+
+One of these nocturnal visits to the wreck I recall with peculiar
+gusto, because it brought back that contest with catarrh and coughing
+among my own warriors which had so ludicrously beset me in Florida. It
+was always fascinating to be on those forbidden waters by night,
+stealing out with muffled oars through the creeks and reeds, our eyes
+always strained for other voyagers, our ears listening breathlessly to
+all the marsh sounds,--blackflsh splashing, and little wakened
+reed-birds that fled wailing away over the dim river, equally safe on
+either side. But it always appeared to the watchful senses that we
+were making noise enough to be heard at Fort Sumter; and somehow the
+victims of catarrh seemed always the most eager for any enterprise
+requiring peculiar caution. In this case I thought I had sifted them
+before-hand; but as soon as we were afloat, one poor boy near me began
+to wheeze, and I turned upon him in exasperation. He saw his danger,
+and meekly said, "I won't cough, Gunnel!" and he kept his word. For
+two mortal hours he sat grasping his gun, with never a chirrup. But
+two unfortunates in the bow of the boat developed symptoms which I
+could not suppress; so, putting in at a picket station, with some risk
+I dumped them in mud knee-deep, and embarked a substitute, who after
+the first five minutes absolutely coughed louder than both the others
+united. Handkerchiefs, blankets, over-coats, suffocation in its direst
+forms, were tried in vain, but apparently the Rebel pickets slept
+through it all, and we exploded the wreck in safety. I think they were
+asleep, for certainly across the level marshes there came a nasal
+sound, as of the "Con-thieveracy" in its slumbers. It may have been a
+bull-frog, but it sounded like a human snore.
+
+Picket life was of course the place to feel the charm of natural beauty
+on the Sea Islands. We had a world of profuse and tangled vegetation
+around us, such as would have been a dream of delight to me, but for the
+constant sense of responsibility and care which came between. Amid this
+preoccupation, Nature seemed but a mirage, and not the close and
+intimate associate I had before known. I pressed no flowers, collected
+no insects or birds' eggs, made no notes on natural objects, reversing
+in these respects all previous habits. Yet now, in the retrospect, there
+seems to have been infused into me through every pore the voluptuous
+charm of the season and the place; and the slightest corresponding sound
+or odor now calls back the memory of those delicious days. Being
+afterwards on picket at almost every season, I tasted the sensations of
+all; and though I hardly then thought of such a result, the associations
+of beauty will remain forever.
+
+In February, for instance,--though this was during a later period of
+picket service,--the woods were usually draped with that "net of
+shining haze" which marks our Northern May; and the house was
+embowered in wild-plum-blossoms, small, white, profuse, and tenanted
+by murmuring bees. There were peach-blossoms, too, and the yellow
+jasmine was opening its multitudinous buds, climbing over tall trees,
+and waving from bough to bough. There were fresh young ferns and white
+bloodroot in the edges of woods, matched by snowdrops in the garden,
+beneath budded myrtle and _Petisporum_. In this wilderness the birds
+were busy; the two main songsters being the mocking-bird and the
+cardinal-grosbeak, which monopolized all the parts of our more varied
+Northern orchestra save the tender and liquid notes, which in South
+Carolina seemed unattempted except by some stray blue-bird. Jays were
+as loud and busy as at the North in autumn; there were sparrows and
+wrens; and sometimes I noticed the shy and whimsical chewink.
+
+From this early spring-time onward, there seemed no great difference in
+atmospheric sensations, and only a succession of bloom. After two months
+one's notions of the season grew bewildered, just as very early rising
+bewilders the day. In the army one is perhaps roused after a bivouac,
+marches before daybreak, halts, fights, somebody is killed, a long day's
+life has been lived, and after all it is not seven o'clock, and
+breakfast is not ready. So when we had lived in summer so long as hardly
+to remember winter, it suddenly occurred to us that it was not yet June.
+One escapes at the South that mixture of hunger and avarice which is
+felt in the Northern summer, counting each hour's joy with the sad
+consciousness that an hour is gone. The compensating loss is in missing
+those soft, sweet, liquid sensations of the Northern spring, that burst
+of life and joy, those days of heaven that even April brings; and this
+absence of childhood in the year creates a feeling of hardness in the
+season, like that I have suggested in the melody of the Southern birds.
+It seemed to me also that the woods had not those pure, clean, _innocent_
+odors which so abound in the New England forest in early spring; but
+there was something luscious, voluptuous, almost oppressively fragrant
+about the magnolias, as if they belonged not to Hebe, but to Magdalen.
+
+Such immense and lustrous butterflies I had never seen but in dreams;
+and not even dreams had prepared me for sand-flies. Almost too small to
+be seen, they inflicted a bite which appeared larger than themselves,--a
+positive wound, more torturing than that of a mosquito, and leaving more
+annoyance behind. These tormentors elevated dress-parade into the
+dignity of a military engagement. I had to stand motionless, with my
+head a mere nebula of winged atoms, while tears rolled profusely down my
+face, from mere muscular irritation. Had I stirred a finger, the whole
+battalion would have been slapping its cheeks. Such enemies were,
+however, a valuable aid to discipline, on the whole, as they
+abounded in the guard-house, and made that institution an object of
+unusual abhorrence among the men.
+
+The presence of ladies and the homelike air of everything, made the
+picket station a very popular resort while we were there. It was the one
+agreeable ride from Beaufort, and we often had a dozen people
+unexpectedly to dinner. On such occasions there was sometimes mounting
+in hot haste, and an eager search among the outlying plantations for
+additional chickens and eggs, or through the company kitchens for some
+of those villanous tin cans which everywhere marked the progress of our
+army. In those cans, so far as my observation went, all fruits relapsed
+into a common acidulation, and all meats into a similarity of
+tastelessness; while the "condensed milk" was best described by the men,
+who often unconsciously stumbled on a better joke than they knew, and
+always spoke of it as _condemned_ milk.
+
+We had our own excursions too,--to the Barnwell plantations, with their
+beautiful avenues and great live-oaks, the perfection of Southern
+beauty,--to Hall's Island, debatable ground, close under the enemy's
+fire, where half-wild cattle were to be shot, under military
+precautions, like Scottish moss-trooping,--or to the ferry, where it was
+fascinating to the female mind to scan the Rebel pickets through a
+field-glass. Our horses liked the by-ways far better than the level
+hardness of the Shell Road, especially those we had brought from
+Florida, which enjoyed the wilderness as if they had belonged to
+Marion's men. They delighted to feel the long sedge brush their flanks,
+or to gallop down the narrow wood-paths, leaping the fallen trees, and
+scaring the bright little lizards which shot across our track like live
+rays broken from the sunbeams. We had an abundance of horses, mostly
+captured and left in our hands by some convenient delay of the post
+quartermaster. We had also two side-saddles, which, not being munitions
+of war, could not properly (as we explained) be transferred like other
+captured articles to the general stock; otherwise the P. Q. M. (a
+married man) would have showed no unnecessary delay in their case. For
+miscellaneous accommodation was there not an ambulance,--that most
+inestimable of army conveniences, equally ready to carry the merry to a
+feast or the wounded from a fray. "Ambulance" was one of those words,
+rather numerous, which Ethiopian lips were not framed by Nature to
+articulate. Only the highest stages of colored culture could compass it;
+on the tongue of the many it was transformed mystically as "amulet," or
+ambitiously as "epaulet," or in culinary fashion as "omelet." But it was
+our experience that an ambulance under any name jolted equally hard.
+
+Besides these divertisements, we had more laborious vocations,--a good
+deal of fatigue, and genuine though small alarms. The men went on duty
+every third day at furthest, and the officers nearly as often,--most of
+the tours of duty lasting twenty-four hours, though the stream was
+considered to watch itself tolerably well by daylight. This kind of
+responsibility suited the men; and we had already found, as the whole
+army afterwards acknowledged, that the constitutional watchfulness and
+distrustfulness of the colored race made them admirable sentinels. Soon
+after we went on picket, the commanding general sent an aid, with a
+cavalry escort, to visit all the stations, without my knowledge. They
+spent the whole night, and the officer reported that he could not get
+within thirty yards of any post without a challenge. This was a pleasant
+assurance for me; since our position seemed so secure, compared with
+Jacksonville, that I had feared some relaxation of vigilance, while yet
+the safety of all depended on our thorough discharge of duty.
+
+Jacksonville had also seasoned the men so well that they were no
+longer nervous, and did not waste much powder on false alarms. The
+Rebels made no formal attacks, and rarely attempted to capture
+pickets. Sometimes they came stealing through the creeks in "dugouts,"
+as we did on their side of the water, and occasionally an officer of
+ours was fired upon while making his rounds by night. Often some boat
+or scow would go adrift, and sometimes a mere dark mass of river-weed
+would be floated by the tide past the successive stations, eliciting a
+challenge and perhaps a shot from each. I remember the vivid way in
+which one of the men stated to his officer the manner in which a
+faithful picket should do his duty, after challenging, in case a boat
+came in sight. "Fus' ting I shoot, and den I shoot, and den I shoot
+again. Den I creep-creep up near de boat, and see who dey in 'em; and
+s'pose anybody pop up he head, den I shoot again. S'pose I fire my
+forty rounds. I tink he hear at de camp and send more mans,"--which
+seemed a reasonable presumption. This soldier's name was Paul Jones, a
+daring fellow, quite worthy of his namesake.
+
+In time, however, they learned quieter methods, and would wade far out
+in the water, there standing motionless at last, hoping to surround and
+capture these floating boats, though, to their great disappointment, the
+prize usually proved empty. On one occasion they tried a still
+profounder strategy; for an officer visiting the pickets after midnight,
+and hearing in the stillness a portentous snore from the end of the
+causeway (our most important station), straightway hurried to the point
+of danger, with wrath in his soul. But the sergeant of the squad came
+out to meet him, imploring silence, and explaining that they had seen or
+suspected a boat hovering near, and were feigning sleep in order to lure
+and capture those who would entrap them.
+
+The one military performance at the picket station of which my men were
+utterly intolerant was an occasional flag of truce, for which this was
+the appointed locality. These farces, for which it was our duty to
+furnish the stock actors, always struck them as being utterly
+despicable, and unworthy the serious business of war. They felt, I
+suppose, what Mr. Pickwick felt, when he heard his counsel remark to the
+counsel for the plaintiff, that it was a very fine morning. It goaded
+their souls to see the young officers from the two opposing armies
+salute each other courteously, and interchange cigars. They despised the
+object of such negotiations, which was usually to send over to the enemy
+some family of Rebel women who had made themselves quite intolerable on
+our side, but were not above collecting a subscription among the Union
+officers, before departure, to replenish their wardrobes. The men never
+showed disrespect to these women by word or deed, but they hated them
+from the bottom of their souls. Besides, there was a grievance behind
+all this.
+
+The Rebel order remained unrevoked which consigned the new colored
+troops and their officers to a felon's death, if captured; and we all
+felt that we fought with ropes round our necks. "Dere's no flags ob
+truce for us," the men would contemptuously say. "When de Secesh fight
+de _Fus' Souf_" (First South Carolina), "he fight in earnest." Indeed, I
+myself took it as rather a compliment when the commander on the other
+side--though an old acquaintance of mine in Massachusetts and in
+Kansas--at first refused to negotiate through me or my officers,--a
+refusal which was kept up, greatly to the enemy's inconvenience, until
+our men finally captured some of the opposing pickets, and their friends
+had to waive all scruples in order to send them supplies. After this
+there was no trouble, and I think that the first Rebel officer in South
+Carolina who officially met any officer of colored troops under a flag
+of truce was Captain John C. Calhoun. In Florida we had been so
+recognized long before; but that was when they wished to frighten us out
+of Jacksonville.
+
+Such was our life on picket at Port Royal,--a thing whose memory is now
+fast melting into such stuff as dreams are made of. We stayed there more
+than two months at that tune; the first attack on Charleston exploded
+with one puff, and had its end; General Hunter was ordered North, and
+the busy Gilmore reigned in his stead; and in June, when the
+blackberries were all eaten, we were summoned, nothing loath, to other
+scenes and encampments new.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 6
+A Night in the Water
+
+
+Yes, that was a pleasant life on picket, in the delicious early summer
+of the South, and among the endless flowery forests of that blossoming
+isle. In the retrospect I seem to see myself adrift upon a horse's back
+amid a sea of roses. The various outposts were within a six-mile radius,
+and it was one long, delightful gallop, day and night. I have a faint
+impression that the moon shone steadily every night for two months; and
+yet I remember certain periods of such dense darkness that in riding
+through the wood-paths it was really unsafe to go beyond a walk, for
+fear of branches above and roots below; and one of my officers was once
+shot at by a Rebel scout who stood unperceived at his horse's bridle.
+
+To those doing outpost-duty on an island, however large, the main-land
+has all the fascination of forbidden fruit, and on a scale bounded
+only by the horizon. Emerson says that every house looks ideal until
+we enter it,--and it is certainly so, if it be just the other side of
+the hostile lines. Every grove in that blue distance appears enchanted
+ground, and yonder loitering gray-back leading his horse to water in
+the farthest distance, makes one thrill with a desire to hail him, to
+shoot at him, to capture him, to do anything to bridge this inexorable
+dumb space that lies between. A boyish feeling, no doubt, and one that
+time diminishes, without effacing; yet it is a feeling which lies at
+the bottom of many rash actions in war, and of some brilliant ones.
+For one, I could never quite outgrow it, though restricted by duty
+from doing many foolish things in consequence, and also restrained by
+reverence for certain confidential advisers whom I had always at hand,
+and who considered it their mission to keep me always on short rations
+of personal adventure. Indeed, most of that sort of entertainment in
+the army devolves upon scouts detailed for the purpose, volunteer
+aides-de-camp and newspaper-reporters,--other officers being expected
+to be about business more prosaic.
+
+All the excitements of war are quadrupled by darkness; and as I rode
+along our outer lines at night, and watched the glimmering flames which
+at regular intervals starred the opposite river-shore, the longing was
+irresistible to cross the barrier of dusk, and see whether it were men
+or ghosts who hovered round those dying embers. I had yielded to these
+impulses in boat-adventures by night,--for it was a part of my
+instructions to obtain all possible information about the Rebel
+outposts,--and fascinating indeed it was to glide along, noiselessly
+paddling, with a dusky guide, through the endless intricacies of those
+Southern marshes, scaring the reed-birds, which wailed and fled away
+into the darkness, and penetrating several miles into the ulterior,
+between hostile fires, where discovery might be death. Yet there were
+drawbacks as to these enterprises, since it is not easy for a boat to
+cross still water, even on the darkest night, without being seen by
+watchful eyes; and, moreover, the extremes of high and low tide
+transform so completely the whole condition of those rivers that it
+needs very nice calculation to do one's work at precisely the right
+tune. To vary the experiment, I had often thought of trying a personal
+reconnoissance by swimming, at a certain point, whenever circumstances
+should make it an object.
+
+The oportunity at last arrived, and I shall never forget the glee with
+which, after several postponements, I finally rode forth, a little
+before midnight, on a night which seemed made for the purpose. I had,
+of course, kept my own secret, and was entirely alone. The great
+Southern fireflies were out, not haunting the low ground merely, like
+ours, but rising to the loftiest tree-tops with weird illumination,
+and anon hovering so low that my horse often stepped the higher to
+avoid them. The dewy Cherokee roses brushed my face, the solemn
+"Chuckwill's-widow" croaked her incantation, and the rabbits raced
+phantom-like across the shadowy road. Slowly in the darkness I
+followed the well-known path to the spot where our most advanced
+outposts were stationed, holding a causeway which thrust itself far
+out across the separating river,--thus fronting a similar causeway on
+the other side, while a channel of perhaps three hundred yards, once
+traversed by a ferry-boat, rolled between. At low tide this channel
+was the whole river, with broad, oozy marshes on each side; at high
+tide the marshes were submerged, and the stream was a mile wide. This
+was the point which I had selected. To ascertain the numbers and
+position of the picket on the opposite causeway was my first object,
+as it was a matter on which no two of our officers agreed.
+
+To this point, therefore, I rode, and dismounting, after being duly
+challenged by the sentinel at the causeway-head, walked down the long
+and lonely path. The tide was well up, though still on the flood, as I
+desired; and each visible tuft of marsh-grass might, but for its
+motionlessness, have been a prowling boat. Dark as the night had
+appeared, the water was pale, smooth, and phosphorescent, and I remember
+that the phrase "wan water," so familiar in the Scottish ballards,
+struck me just then as peculiarly appropriate, though its real meaning
+is quite different. A gentle breeze, from which I had hoped for a
+ripple, had utterly died away, and it was a warm, breathless Southern
+night. There was no sound but the famt swash of the coming tide, the
+noises of the reed-birds in the marshes, and the occasional leap of a
+fish; and it seemed to my overstrained ear as if every footstep of my
+own must be heard for miles. However, I could have no more
+postponements, and the thing must be tried now or never.
+
+Reaching the farther end of the causeway, I found my men couched, like
+black statues, behind the slight earthwork there constructed. I
+expected that my proposed immersion would rather bewilder them, but
+knew that they would say nothing, as usual. As for the lieutenant on
+that post, he was a steady, matter-of-fact, perfectly disciplined
+Englishman, who wore a Crimean medal, and never asked a superfluous
+question in his life. If I had casually remarked to him, "Mr. Hooper,
+the General has ordered me on a brief personal reconnoissance to the
+Planet Jupiter, and I wish you to take care of my watch, lest it
+should be damaged by the Precession of the Equinoxes," he would have
+responded with a brief "All right, Sir," and a quick military gesture,
+and have put the thing in his pocket. As it was, I simply gave him the
+watch, and remarked that I was going to take a swim.
+
+I do not remember ever to have experienced a greater sense of
+exhilaration than when I slipped noiselessly into the placid water, and
+struck out into the smooth, eddying current for the opposite shore. The
+night was so still and lovely, my black statues looked so dream-like at
+their posts behind the low earthwork, the opposite arm of the causeway
+stretched so invitingly from the Rebel main, the horizon glimmered so
+low around me,--for it always appears lower to a swimmer than even to an
+oarsman,--that I seemed floating in some concave globe, some magic
+crystal, of which I was the enchanted centre. With each little ripple of
+my steady progress all things hovered and changed; the stars danced and
+nodded above; where the stars ended the great Southern fireflies began;
+and closer than the fireflies, there clung round me a halo of
+phosphorescent sparkles from the soft salt water.
+
+Had I told any one of my purpose, I should have had warnings and
+remonstrances enough. The few negroes who did not believe in
+alligators believed in sharks; the sceptics as to sharks were orthodox
+in respect to alligators; while those who rejected both had private
+prejudices as to snapping-turtles. The surgeon would have threatened
+intermittent fever, the first assistant rheumatism, and the second
+assistant congestive chills; non-swimmers would have predicted
+exhaustion, and swimmers cramp; and all this before coming within
+bullet-range of any hospitalities on the other shore. But I knew the
+folly of most alarms about reptiles and fishes; man's imagination
+peoples the water with many things which do not belong there, or
+prefer to keep out of his way, if they do; fevers and congestions were
+the surgeon's business, and I always kept people to their own
+department; cramp and exhaustion were dangers I could measure, as I
+had often done; bullets were a more substantial danger, and I must
+take the chance,--if a loon could dive at the flash, why not I? If I
+were once ashore, I should have to cope with the Rebels on their own
+ground, which they knew better than I; but the water was my ground,
+where I, too, had been at home from boyhood.
+
+I swam as swiftly and softly as I could, although it seemed as if water
+never had been so still before. It appeared impossible that anything
+uncanny should hide beneath that lovely mirror; and yet when some
+floating wisp of reeds suddenly coiled itself around my neck, or some
+unknown thing, drifting deeper, coldly touched my foot, it caused that
+undefinable shudder which every swimmer knows, and which especially
+comes over one by night. Sometimes a slight sip of brackish water would
+enter my lips,--for I naturally tried to swim as low as possible,--and
+then would follow a slight gasping and contest against chocking, that
+seemed to me a perfect convulsion; for I suppose the tendency to choke
+and sneeze is always enhanced by the circumstance that one's life may
+depend on keeping still, just as yawning becomes irresistible where to
+yawn would be social ruin, and just as one is sure to sleep in church,
+if one sits in a conspicuous pew. At other times, some unguarded motion
+would create a splashing which seemed, in the tension of my senses, to
+be loud enough to be heard at Richmond, although it really mattered not,
+since there are fishes in those rivers which make as much noise on
+special occasions as if they were misguided young whales.
+
+As I drew near the opposite shore, the dark causeway projected more and
+more distinctly, to my fancy at least, and I swam more softly still,
+utterly uncertain as to how far, in the stillness of air and water, my
+phosphorescent course could be traced by eye or ear. A slight ripple
+would have saved me from observation, I was more than ever sure, and
+I would have whistled for a fair wind as eagerly as any sailor, but that
+my breath was worth to me more than anything it was likely to bring. The
+water became smoother and smoother, and nothing broke the dim surface
+except a few clumps of rushes and my unfortunate head. The outside of
+this member gradually assumed to its inside a gigantic magnitude; it had
+always annoyed me at the hatter's from a merely animal bigness, with no
+commensurate contents to show for it, and now I detested it more than
+ever. A physical feeling of turgescence and congestion in that region,
+such as swimmers often feel, probably increased the impression. I
+thought with envy of the Aztec children, of the headless horseman of
+Sleepy Hollow, of Saint Somebody with his head tucked under his arm.
+Plotinus was less ashamed of his whole body than I of this inconsiderate
+and stupid appendage. To be sure, I might swim for a certain distance
+under water. But that accomplishment I had reserved for a retreat, for I
+knew that the longer I stayed down the more surely I should have to
+snort like a walrus when I came up again, and to approach an enemy with
+such a demonstration was not to be thought of.
+
+Suddenly a dog barked. We had certain information that a pack of hounds
+was kept at a Rebel station a few miles off, on purpose to hunt
+runaways, and I had heard from the negroes almost fabulous accounts of
+the instinct of these animals. I knew that, although water baffled their
+scent, they yet could recognize in some manner the approach of any
+person across water as readily as by land; and of the vigilance of all
+dogs by night every traveller among Southern plantations has ample
+demonstration. I was now so near that I could dimly see the figures of
+men moving to and fro upon the end of the causeway, and could hear the
+dull knock, when one struck his foot against a piece of limber.
+
+As my first object was to ascertain whether there were sentinels at
+that time at that precise point, I saw that I was approaching the end
+of my experiment Could I have once reached the causeway unnoticed, I
+could have lurked in the water beneath its projecting timbers, and
+perhaps made my way along the main shore, as I had known fugitive
+slaves to do, while coming from that side. Or had there been any
+ripple on the water, to confuse the aroused and watchful eyes, I could
+have made a circuit and approached the causeway at another point,
+though I had already satisfied myself that there was only a narrow
+channel on each side of it, even at high tide, and not, as on our
+side, a broad expanse of water. Indeed, this knowledge alone was worth
+all the trouble I had taken, and to attempt much more than this, in
+the face of a curiosity already roused, would have been a waste of
+future opportunities. I could try again, with the benefit of this new
+knowledge, on a point where the statements of the negroes had always
+been contradictory.
+
+Resolving, however, to continue the observation a very little longer,
+since the water felt much warmer than I had expected, and there was no
+sense of chill or fatigue, I grasped at some wisps of straw or rushes
+that floated near, gathering them round my face a little, and then
+drifting nearer the wharf in what seemed a sort of eddy was able,
+without creating further alarm, to make some additional observations on
+points which it is not best now to particularize. Then, turning my back
+upon the mysterious shore which had thus far lured me, I sank softly
+below the surface, and swam as far as I could under water.
+
+During this unseen retreat, I heard, of course, all manner of gurglings
+and hollow reverberations, and could fancy as many rifle-shots as I
+pleased. But on rising to the surface all seemed quiet, and even I did
+not create as much noise as I should have expected. I was now at a safe
+distance, since the enemy were always chary of showing their boats, and
+always tried to convince us they had none. What with absorbed attention
+first, and this submersion afterwards, I had lost all my bearings but
+the stars, having been long out of sight of my original point of
+departure. However, the difficulties of the return were nothing; making
+a slight allowance for the floodtide, which could not yet have turned, I
+should soon regain the place I had left. So I struck out freshly against
+the smooth water, feeling just a little stiffened by the exertion,
+and with an occasional chill running up the back of the neck, but with
+no nips from sharks, no nudges from alligators, and not a symptom of
+fever-and-ague.
+
+Time I could not, of course, measure,--one never can in a novel position;
+but, after a reasonable amount of swimming, I began to look, with a
+natural interest, for the pier which I had quitted. I noticed, with some
+solicitude, that the woods along the friendly shore made one continuous
+shadow, and that the line of low bushes on the long causeway could
+scarcely be relieved against them, yet I knew where they ought to be,
+and the more doubtful I felt about it, the more I put down my doubts, as
+if they were unreasonable children. One can scarcely conceive of the
+alteration made in familiar objects by bringing the eye as low as the
+horizon, especially by night; to distinguish foreshortening is
+impossible, and every low near object is equivalent to one higher and
+more remote. Still I had the stars; and soon my eye, more practised, was
+enabled to select one precise line of bushes as that which marked the
+causeway, and for which I must direct my course.
+
+As I swam steadily, but with some sense of fatigue, towards this
+phantom-line, I found it difficult to keep my faith steady and my
+progress true; everything appeared to shift and waver, in the uncertain
+light. The distant trees seemed not trees, but bushes, and the bushes
+seemed not exactly bushes, but might, after all, be distant trees. Could
+I be so confident that, out of all that low stretch of shore, I could
+select the one precise point where the friendly causeway stretched its
+long arm to receive me from the water? How easily (some tempter
+whispered at my ear) might one swerve a little, on either side, and be
+compelled to flounder over half a mile of oozy marsh on an ebbing tide,
+before reaching our own shore and that hospitable volley of bullets with
+which it would probably greet me! Had I not already (thus the tempter
+continued) been swimming rather unaccountably far, supposing me on a
+straight track for that inviting spot where my sentinels and my drapery
+were awaiting my return?
+
+Suddenly I felt a sensation as of fine ribbons drawn softly
+across my person, and I found myself among some rushes. But what
+business had rushes there, or I among them? I knew that there was not a
+solitary spot of shoal in the deep channel where I supposed myself
+swimming, and it was plain in an instant that I had somehow missed my
+course, and must be getting among the marshes. I felt confident, to be
+sure, that I could not have widely erred, but was guiding my course for
+the proper side of tie river. But whether I had drifted above or below
+the causeway I had not the slightest clew to tell.
+
+I pushed steadily forward, with some increasing sense of lassitude,
+passing one marshy islet after another, all seeming strangely out of
+place, and sometimes just reaching with my foot a soft tremulous shoal
+which gave scarce the shadow of a support, though even that shadow
+rested my feet. At one of these moments of stillness it suddenly
+occurred to my perception (what nothing but this slight contact could
+have assured me, in the darkness) that I was in a powerful current, and
+that this current set _the wrong way_. Instantly a flood of new
+intelligence came. Either I had unconsciously turned and was rapidly
+nearing the Rebel shore,--a suspicion which a glance at the stars
+corrected,--or else it was the tide itself which had turned, and which
+was sweeping me down the river with all its force, and was also sucking
+away at every moment the narrowing water from that treacherous expanse
+of mud out of whose horrible miry embrace I had lately helped to rescue
+a shipwrecked crew.
+
+Either alternative was rather formidable. I can distinctly remember
+that for about one half-minute the whole vast universe appeared to
+swim in the same watery uncertainty in which I floated. I began to
+doubt everything, to distrust the stars, the line of low bushes for
+which I was wearily striving, the very land on which they grew, if
+such visionary things could be rooted anywhere. Doubts trembled in my
+mind like the weltering water, and that awful sensation of having
+one's feet unsupported, which benumbs the spent swimmer's heart,
+seemed to clutch at mine, though not yet to enter it. I was more
+absorbed in that singular sensation of nightmare, such as one may feel
+equally when lost by land or by water, as if one's own position were
+all right, but the place looked for had somehow been preternaturally
+abolished out of the universe. At best, might not a man in the water
+lose all his power of direction, and so move in an endless circle
+until he sank exhausted? It required a deliberate and conscious effort
+to keep my brain quite cool. I have not the reputation of being of an
+excitable temperament, but the contrary; yet I could at that moment
+see my way to a condition in which one might become insane in an
+instant. It was as if a fissure opened somewhere, and I saw my way
+into a mad-house; then it closed, and everything went on as before.
+Once in my life I had obtained a slight glimpse of the same sensation,
+and then, too, strangely enough, while swimming,--in the mightiest
+ocean-surge into which I had ever dared plunge my mortal body. Keats
+hints at the same sudden emotion, in a wild poem written among the
+Scottish mountains. It was not the distinctive sensation which
+drowning men are said to have, that spasmodic passing in review of
+one's whole personal history. I had no well-defined anxiety, felt no
+fear, was moved to no prayer, did not give a thought to home or
+friends; only it swept over me, as with a sudden tempest, that, if I
+meant to get back to my own camp, I must keep my wits about me. I must
+not dwell on any other alternative, any more than a boy who climbs a
+precipice must look down. Imagination had no business here. That way
+madness lay. There was a shore somewhere before me, and I must get to
+it, by the ordinary means, before the ebb laid bare the flats, or
+swept me below the lower bends of the stream. That was all.
+
+Suddenly a light gleamed for an instant before me, as if from a house in
+a grove of great trees upon a bank; and I knew that it came from the
+window of a ruined plantation-building, where our most advanced outposts
+had their headquarters. The flash revealed to me every point of the
+situation. I saw at once where I was, and how I got there: that the tide
+had turned while I was swimming, and with a much briefer interval of
+slack-water than I had been led to suppose,--that I had been swept a
+good way down stream, and was far beyond all possibility of regaining
+the point I had left.
+
+Could I, however, retain my strength to swim one or two hundred yards
+farther, of which I had no doubt,--and if the water did not ebb too
+rapidly, of which I had more fear,--then I was quite safe. Every stroke
+took me more and more out of the power of the current, and there might
+even be an eddy to aid me. I could not afford to be carried down much
+farther, for there the channel made a sweep toward the wrong side of the
+river; but there was now no reason why I should not reach land. I could
+dismiss all fear, indeed, except that of being fired upon by our own
+sentinels, many of whom were then new recruits, and with the usual
+disposition to shoot first and investigate afterwards.
+
+I found myself swimming in shallow and shallower water, and the flats
+seemed almost bare when I neared the shore, where the great gnarled
+branches of the liveoaks hung far over the muddy bank. Floating on my
+back for noiselessness, I paddled rapidly in with my hands, expecting
+momentarily to hear the challenge of the picket, and the ominous click
+so likely to follow. I knew that some one should be pacing to and fro,
+along that beat, but could not tell at what point he might be at that
+precise moment. Besides, there was a faint possibility that some chatty
+corporal might have carried the news of my bath thus far along the line,
+and they might be partially prepared for this unexpected visitor.
+Suddenly, like another flash, came the quick, quaint challenge,--
+
+"Halt! Who's go dar?"
+
+"F-f-friend with the c-c-countersign," retorted I, with chilly, but
+conciliatory energy, rising at full length out of the shallow water, to
+show myself a man and a brother.
+
+"Ac-vance, friend, and give de countersign," responded the literal
+soldier, who at such a tune would have accosted : a spirit of light or
+goblin damned with no other formula.
+
+I advanced and gave it, he recognized my voice at once. | And then and
+there, as I stood, a dripping ghost, beneath the f trees before him, the
+unconscionable fellow, wishing to exhaust upon me the utmost
+resources of military hospitality, deliberately presented arms!
+
+Now a soldier on picket, or at night, usually presents arms to nobody;
+but a sentinel on camp-guard by day is expected to perform that
+ceremony to anything in human shape that has two rows of buttons. Here
+was a human shape, but so utterly buttonless that it exhibited not
+even a rag to which a button could by any earthly possibility be
+appended, button-less even potentially; and my blameless Ethiopian
+presented arms to even this. Where, then, are the theories of Carlyle,
+the axioms of "Sartor Resartus," the inability of humanity to conceive
+"a naked Duke of Windlestraw addressing a naked House of Lords"?
+Cautioning my adherent, however, as to the proprieties suitable for
+such occasions thenceforward, I left him watching the river with
+renewed vigilance, and awaiting the next merman who should report
+himself.
+
+Finding my way to the building, I hunted up a sergeant and a blanket,
+got a fire kindled in the dismantled chimney, and sat before it in my
+single garment, like a moist but undismayed Choctaw, until horse and
+clothing could be brought round from the causeway. It seemed strange
+that the morning had not yet dawned, after the uncounted periods that
+must have elapsed; but when the wardrobe arrived I looked at my watch
+and found that my night in the water had lasted precisely one hour.
+
+Galloping home, I turned in with alacrity, and without a drop of
+whiskey, and waked a few hours after in excellent condition. The rapid
+changes of which that Department has seen so many--and, perhaps, to so
+little purpose--soon transferred us to a different scene. I have been on
+other scouts since then, and by various processes, but never with a zest
+so novel as was afforded by that night's experience. The thing soon got
+wind in the regiment, and led to only one ill consequence, so far as I
+know. It rather suppressed a way I had of lecturing the officers on the
+importance of reducing their personal baggage to a minimum. They got a
+trick of congratulating me, very respectfully, on the thoroughness with
+which I had once conformed my practice to my precepts.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 7
+Up the Edisto
+
+
+In reading military history, one finds the main interest to lie,
+undoubtedly, in the great campaigns, where a man, a regiment, a brigade,
+is but a pawn in the game. But there is a charm also in the more free
+and adventurous life of partisan warfare, where, if the total sphere be
+humbler, yet the individual has more relative importance, and the sense
+of action is more personal and keen. This is the reason given by the
+eccentric Revolutionary biographer, Weems, for writing the Life of
+Washington first, and then that of Marion. And there were, certainly, hi
+the early adventures of the colored troops in the Department of the
+South, some of the same elements of picturesqueness that belonged to
+Marion's band, on the same soil, with the added feature that the blacks
+were fighting for then- personal liberties, of which Marion had helped
+to deprive them.
+
+It is stated by Major-General Gillmore, in his "Siege of Charleston,"
+as one of the three points in his preliminary strategy, that an
+expedition was sent up the Edisto River to destroy a bridge on the
+Charleston and Savannah Railway. As one of the early raids of the
+colored troops, this expedition may deserve narration, though it was,
+in a strategic point of view, a disappointment. It has already been
+told, briefly and on the whole with truth, by Greeley and others, but
+I will venture on a more complete account.
+
+The project dated back earlier than General Gillmore's siege, and had
+originally no connection with that movement. It had been formed by
+Captain Trowbridge and myself in camp, and was based on facts learned
+from the men. General Saxton and Colonel W. W. H. Davis, the successive
+post-commanders, had both favored it. It had been also approved by
+General Hunter, before his sudden removal, though he regarded the bridge
+as a secondary affair, because there was another railway communication
+between the two cities. But as my main object was to obtain permission
+to go, I tried to make the most of all results which might follow, while
+it was very clear that the raid would harass and confuse the enemy,
+and be the means of bringing away many of the slaves. General Hunter
+had, therefore, accepted the project mainly as a stroke for freedom and
+black recruits; and General Gillmore, because anything that looked
+toward action found favor in his eyes, and because it would be
+convenient to him at that time to effect a diversion, if nothing more.
+
+It must be remembered that, after the first capture of Port Royal, the
+outlying plantations along the whole Southern coast were abandoned, and
+the slaves withdrawn into the interior. It was necessary to ascend some
+river for thirty miles in order to reach the black population at all.
+This ascent could only be made by night, as it was a slow process, and
+the smoke of a steamboat could be seen for a great distance. The streams
+were usually shallow, winding, and muddy, and the difficulties of
+navigation were such as to require a full moon and a flood tide. It was
+really no easy matter to bring everything to bear, especially as every
+projected raid must be kept a secret so far as possible. However, we
+were now somewhat familiar with such undertakings, half military, half
+naval, and the thing to be done on the Edisto was precisely what we had
+proved to be practicable on the St. Mary's and the St. John's,--to drop
+anchor before the enemy's door some morning at daybreak, without his
+having dreamed of our approach.
+
+Since a raid made by Colonel Montgomery up the Combahee, two months
+before, the vigilance of the Rebels had increased. But we had
+information that upon the South Edisto, or Pon-Pon River, the rice
+plantations were still being actively worked by a large number of
+negroes, in reliance on obstructions placed at the mouth of that
+narrow stream, where it joins the main river, some twenty miles from
+the coast. This point was known to be further protected by a battery
+of unknown strength, at Wiltown Bluff, a commanding and defensible
+situation. The obstructions consisted of a row of strong wooden piles
+across the river; but we convinced ourselves that these must now be
+much decayed, and that Captain Trowbridge, an excellent engineer
+officer, could remove them by the proper apparatus. Our proposition
+was to man the John Adams, an armed ferry-boat, which had before done
+us much service,--and which has now reverted to the pursuits of peace,
+it is said, on the East Boston line,--to ascend in this to Wiltown
+Bluff, silence the battery, and clear a passage through the
+obstructions. Leaving the John Adams to protect this point, we could
+then ascend the smaller stream with two light-draft boats, and perhaps
+burn the bridge, which was ten miles higher, before the enemy could
+bring sufficient force to make our position at Wiltown Bluff
+untenable.
+
+The expedition was organized essentially upon this plan. The smaller
+boats were the Enoch Dean,--a river steamboat, which carried a ten-pound
+Parrott gun, and a small howitzer,--and a little mosquito of a tug, the
+Governor Milton, upon which, with the greatest difficulty, we found room
+for two twelve-pound Armstrong guns, with their gunners, forming a
+section of the First Connecticut Battery, under Lieutenant Clinton,
+aided by a squad from my own regiment, under Captain James. The John
+Adams carried, I if I remember rightly, two Parrott guns (of twenty and
+ten | pounds calibre) and a howitzer or two. The whole force of men did
+not exceed two hundred and fifty.
+
+We left Beaufort, S. C., on the afternoon of July 9th, 1863. In former
+narrations I have sufficiently described the charm of a moonlight
+ascent into a hostile country, upon an unknown stream, the dark and
+silent banks, the rippling water, the wail of the reed-birds, the
+anxious watch, the breathless listening, the veiled lights, the
+whispered orders. To this was now to be added the vexation of an
+insufficient pilotage, for our negro guide knew only the upper river,
+and, as it finally proved, not even that, while, to take us over the
+bar which obstructed the main stream, we must borrow a pilot from
+Captain Dutch, whose gunboat blockaded that point. This active naval
+officer, however, whose boat expeditions had penetrated all the lower
+branches of those rivers, could supply our want, and we borrowed from
+him not only a pilot, but a surgeon, to replace our own, who had been
+prevented by an accident from coming with us. Thus accompanied, we
+steamed over the bar in safety, had a peaceful ascent, passed the
+island of Jehossee,--the fine estate of Governor Aiken, then left
+undisturbed by both sides,--and fired our first shell into the camp at
+Wiltown Bluff at four o'clock in the morning.
+
+The battery--whether fixed or movable we knew not--met us with a
+promptness that proved very shortlived. After three shots it was
+silent, but we could not tell why. The bluff was wooded, and we could
+see but little. The only course was to land, under cover of the guns.
+As the firing ceased and the smoke cleared away, I looked across the
+rice-fields which lay beneath the bluff. The first sunbeams glowed
+upon their emerald levels, and on the blossoming hedges along the
+rectangular dikes. What were those black dots which everywhere
+appeared? Those moist meadows had become alive with human heads, and
+along each narrow path came a straggling file of men and women, all on
+a run for the river-side. I went ashore with a boat-load of troops at
+once. The landing was difficult and marshy. The astonished negroes
+tugged us up the bank, and gazed on us as if we had been Cortez and
+Columbus. They kept arriving by land much faster than we could come by
+water; every moment increased the crowd, the jostling, the mutual
+clinging, on that miry foothold. What a scene it was! With the wild
+faces, eager figures, strange garments, it seemed, as one of the poor
+things reverently suggested, "like notin' but de judgment day."
+Presently they began to come from the houses also, with their little
+bundles on their heads; then with larger bundles. Old women, trotting
+on the narrow paths, would kneel to pray a little prayer, still
+balancing the bundle; and then would suddenly spring up, urged by the
+accumulating procession behind, and would move on till irresistibly
+compelled by thankfulness to dip down for another invocation.
+
+Reaching us, every human being must grasp our hands, amid exclamations
+of "Bress you, mas'r," and "Bress de Lord," at the rate of four of the
+latter ascriptions to one of the former.
+
+Women brought children on their shoulders; small black boys learned on
+their back little brothers equally inky, and, gravely depositing them,
+shook hands. Never had I seen human beings so clad, or rather so
+unclad, in such amazing squalid-ness and destitution of garments. I
+recall one small urchin without a rag of clothing save the basque
+waist of a lady's dress, bristling with whalebones, and worn wrong
+side before, beneath which his smooth ebony legs emerged like those of
+an ostrich from its plumage. How weak is imagination, how cold is
+memory, that I ever cease, for a day of my life, to see before me the
+picture of that astounding scene!
+
+Yet at the time we were perforce a little impatient of all this piety,
+protestation, and hand-pressing; for the vital thing was to ascertain
+what force had been stationed at the bluff, and whether it was yet
+withdrawn. The slaves, on the other hand, were too much absorbed in
+their prospective freedom to aid us in taking any further steps to
+secure it. Captain Trowbridge, who had by this time landed at a
+different point, got quite into despair over the seeming deafness of the
+people to all questions. "How many soldiers are there on the bluff?" he
+asked of the first-comer.
+
+"Mas'r," said the man, stuttering terribly, "I c-c-c--"
+
+"Tell me how many soldiers there are!" roared Trowbridge, in his mighty
+voice, and all but shaking the poor old thing, in his thirst for
+information.
+
+"O mas'r," recommenced in terror the incapacitated wit-ness, "I
+c-c-carpenter!" holding up eagerly a little stump of a hatchet, his
+sole treasure, as if his profession ought to excuse from all military
+opinions.
+
+I wish that it were possible to present all this scene from the point
+of view of the slaves themselves. It can be most nearly done, perhaps,
+by quoting the description given of a similar scene on the Combahee
+River, by a very aged man, who had been brought down on the previous
+raid, already mentioned. I wrote it down in tent, long after, while
+the old man recited the tale, with much gesticulation, at the door;
+and it is by far the best glimpse I have ever had, through a negro's
+eyes, at these wonderful birthdays of freedom.
+
+"De people was all a hoein', mas'r," said the old man. "Dey was a hoein'
+in the rice-field, when de gunboats come. Den ebry man drap dem hoe, and
+leff de rice. De mas'r he stand and call, 'Run to de wood for hide!
+Yankee come, sell you to Cuba! run for hide!' Ebry man he run, and, my
+God! run all toder way!
+
+"Mas'r stand in de wood, peep, peep, faid for truss [afraid to trust].
+He say, 'Run to de wood!' and ebry man run by him, straight to de boat.
+
+"De brack sojer so presumptious, dey come right ashore, hold up dere
+head. Fus' ting I know, dere was a barn, ten tousand bushel rough rice,
+all in a blaze, den mas'r's great house, all cracklin' up de roof.
+Didn't I keer for see 'em blaze? Lor, mas'r, didn't care notin' at all,
+_was gwine to de boat_."
+
+Dore's Don Quixote could not surpass the sublime absorption in which the
+gaunt old man, with arm uplifted, described this stage of affairs, till
+he ended in a shrewd chuckle, worthy of Sancho Panza. Then he resumed.
+
+"De brack sojers so presumptious!" This he repeated three times, slowly
+shaking his head in an ectasy of admiration. It flashed upon me that the
+apparition of a black soldier must amaze those still in bondage, much as
+a butterfly just from the chrysalis might astound his fellow-grubs. I
+inwardly vowed that my soldiers, at least, should be as "presumptious"
+as I could make them. Then he went on.
+
+"Ole woman and I go down to de boat; den dey say behind us, 'Rebels
+comin'l Rebels comin'!' Ole woman say, 'Come ahead, come plenty
+ahead!' I hab notin' on but my shirt and pantaloon; ole woman one
+single frock he hab on, and one handkerchief on he head; I leff
+all-two my blanket and run for de Rebel come, and den dey didn't come,
+didn't truss for come.
+
+"Ise eighty-eight year old, mas'r. My ole Mas'r Lowndes keep all de ages
+in a big book, and when we come to age ob sense we mark em down ebry
+year, so I know. Too ole for come? Mas'r joking. Neber too ole for leave
+de land o' bondage. I old, but great good for chil'en, gib tousand tank
+ebry day. Young people can go through, _force_ [forcibly], mas'r, but de
+ole folk mus' go slow."
+
+Such emotions as these, no doubt, were inspired by our arrival, but we
+could only hear their hasty utterance in passing; our duty being, with
+the small force already landed, to take possession of the bluff.
+Ascending, with proper precautions, the wooded hill, we soon found
+ourselves in the deserted camp of a light battery, amid scattered
+equipments and suggestions of a very unattractive breakfast. As soon as
+possible, skirmishers were thrown out through the woods to the farther
+edge of the bluff, while a party searched the houses, finding the usual
+large supply of furniture and pictures,--brought up for safety from
+below,--but no soldiers. Captain Trowbridge then got the John Adams
+beside the row of piles, and went to work for their removal.
+
+Again I had the exciting sensation of being within the hostile
+lines,--the eager explorations, the doubts, the watchfulness, the
+listening for every sound of coming hoofs. Presently a horse's tread
+was heard in earnest, but it was a squad of our own men bringing in
+two captured cavalry soldiers. One of these, a sturdy fellow,
+submitted quietly to his lot, only begging that, whenever we should
+evacuate the bluff, a note should be left behind stating that he was a
+prisoner. The other, a very young man, and a member of the "Rebel
+Troop," a sort of Cadet corps among the Charleston youths, came to me
+in great wrath, complaining that the corporal of our squad had kicked
+him after he had surrendered. His air of offended pride was very
+rueful, and it did indeed seem a pathetic reversal of fortunes for the
+two races. To be sure, the youth was a scion of one of the foremost
+families of South Carolina, and when I considered the wrongs which the
+black race had encountered from those of his blood, first and last, it
+seemed as if the most scrupulous Recording Angel might tolerate one
+final kick to square the account. But I reproved the corporal, who
+respectfully disclaimed the charge, and said the kick was an incident
+of the scuffle. It certainly was not their habit to show such poor
+malice; they thought too well of themselves.
+
+His demeanor seemed less lofty, but rather piteous, when he implored me
+not to put him on board any vessel which was to ascend the upper stream,
+and hinted, by awful implications, the danger of such ascent. This meant
+torpedoes, a peril which we treated, in those days, with rather mistaken
+contempt. But we found none on the Edisto, and it may be that it was
+only a foolish attempt to alarm us.
+
+Meanwhile, Trowbridge was toiling away at the row of piles, which proved
+easier to draw out than to saw asunder, either work being hard enough.
+It took far longer than we had hoped, and we saw noon approach and the
+tide rapidly fall, taking with it, inch by inch, our hopes of effecting
+a surprise at the bridge. During this time, and indeed all day, the
+detachments on shore, under Captains Whitney and Sampson, were having
+occasional skirmishes with the enemy, while the colored people were
+swarming to the shore, or running to and fro like ants, with the poor
+treasures of their houses. Our busy Quartermaster, Mr. Bingham--who died
+afterwards from the overwork of that sultry day--was transporting the
+refugees on board the steamer, or hunting up bales of cotton, or
+directing the burning of rice-houses, in accordance with our orders. No
+dwelling-houses were destroyed or plundered by our men,--Sherman's
+"bummers" not having yet arrived,--though I asked no questions as to what
+the plantation negroes might bring in their great bundles. One piece of
+property, I must admit, seemed a lawful capture,--a United States
+dress-sword, of the old pattern, which had belonged to the Rebel general
+who afterwards gave the order to bury Colonel Shaw "with his niggers."
+That I have retained, not without some satisfaction, to this day.
+
+A passage having been cleared at last, and the tide having turned by
+noon, we lost no time in attempting the ascent, leaving the bluff to
+be held by the John Adams, and by the small force on shore. We were
+scarcely above the obstructions, however, when the little tug went
+aground, and the Enoch Dean, ascending a mile farther, had an
+encounter with a battery on the right,--perhaps our old enemy,--and
+drove it back. Soon after, she also ran aground, a misfortune of which
+our opponent strangely took no advantage; and, on getting off, I
+thought it best to drop down to the bluff again, as the tide was still
+hoplessly low. None can tell, save those who have tried them, the
+vexations of those muddy Southern streams, navigable only during a few
+hours of flood-tide.
+
+After waiting an hour, the two small vessels again tried the ascent. The
+enemy on the right had disappeared; but we could now see, far off on our
+left, another light battery moving parallel with the river, apparently
+to meet us at some upper bend. But for the present we were safe, with
+the low rice-fields on each side of us; and the scene was so peaceful,
+it seemed as if all danger were done. For the first time, we saw in
+South Carolina blossoming river-banks and low emerald meadows, that
+seemed like New England. Everywhere there were the same rectangular
+fields, smooth canals, and bushy dikes. A few negroes stole out to us in
+dugouts, and breathlessly told us how others had been hurried away by
+the overseers. We glided safely on, mile after mile. The day was
+unutterably hot, but all else seemed propitious. The men had their
+combustibles all ready to fire the bridge, and our hopes were unbounded.
+
+But by degrees the channel grew more tortuous and difficult, and while
+the little Milton glided smoothly over everything, the Enoch Dean, my
+own boat, repeatedly grounded. On every occasion of especial need,
+too, something went wrong in her machinery,--her engine being
+constructed on some wholly new patent, of which, I should hope, this
+trial would prove entirely sufficient. The black pilot, who was not a
+soldier, grew more and more bewildered, and declared that it was the
+channel, not his brain, which had gone wrong; the captain, a little
+elderly man, sat wringing his hands in the pilot-box; and the engineer
+appeared to be mingling his groans with those of the diseased engine.
+Meanwhile I, in equal ignorance of machinery and channel, had to give
+orders only justified by minute acquaintance with both. So I navigated
+on general principles, until they grounded us on a mud-bank, just
+below a wooded point, and some two miles from the bridge of our
+destination. It was with a pang that I waved to Major Strong, who was
+on the other side of the channel in a tug, not to risk approaching us,
+but to steam on and finish the work, if he could.
+
+Short was his triumph. Gliding round the point, he found himself
+instantly engaged with a light battery of four or six guns, doubtless
+the same we had seen in the distance. The Milton was within two hundred
+and fifty yards. The Connecticut men fought then: guns well, aided by
+the blacks, and it was exasperating for us to hear the shots, while we
+could see nothing and do nothing. The scanty ammunition of our bow gun
+was exhausted, and the gun in the stern was useless, from the position
+in which we lay. In vain we moved the men from side to side, rocking the
+vessel, to dislodge it. The heat was terrific that August afternoon; I
+remember I found myself constantly changing places, on the scorched
+deck, to keep my feet from being blistered. At last the officer in
+charge of the gun, a hardy lumberman from Maine, got the stern of the
+vessel so far round that he obtained the range of the battery through
+the cabin windows, "but it would be necessary," he cooly added, on
+reporting to me this fact, "to shoot away the corner of the cabin." I
+knew that this apartment was newly painted and gilded, and the idol of
+the poor captain's heart; but it was plain that even the thought of his
+own upholstery could not make the poor soul more wretched than he was.
+So I bade Captain Dolly blaze away, and thus we took our hand in the
+little game, though at a sacrifice.
+
+It was of no use. Down drifted out little consort round the point, her
+engine disabled and her engineer killed, as we afterwards found, though
+then we could only look and wonder. Still pluckily firing, she floated
+by upon the tide, which had now just turned; and when, with a last
+desperate effort, we got off, our engine had one of its impracticable
+fits, and we could only follow her. The day was waning, and all its
+range of possibility had lain within the limits of that one tide.
+
+All our previous expeditions had been so successful it now seemed hard
+to turn back; the river-banks and rice-fields, so beautiful before,
+seemed only a vexation now. But the swift current bore us on, and after
+our Parthian shots had died away, a new discharge of artillery opened
+upon us, from our first antagonist of the morning, which still kept the
+other side of the stream. It had taken up a strong position on another
+bluff, almost out of range of the John Adams, but within easy range of
+us. The sharpest contest of the day was before us. Happily the engine
+and engineer were now behaving well, and we were steering in a channel
+already traversed, and of which the dangerous points were known. But we
+had a long, straight reach of river before us, heading directly toward
+the battery, which, having once got our range, had only to keep it,
+while we could do nothing in return. The Rebels certainly served then:
+guns well. For the first time I discovered that there were certain
+compensating advantages in a slightly built craft, as compared with one
+more substantial; the missiles never lodged in the vessel, but crashed
+through some thin partition as if it were paper, to explode beyond us,
+or fall harmless in the water. Splintering, the chief source of wounds
+and death in wooden ships, was thus entirely avoided; the danger was
+that our machinery might be disabled, or that shots might strike below
+the water-line and sink us.
+
+This, however, did not happen. Fifteen projectiles, as we afterwards
+computed, passed through the vessel or cut the rigging. Yet few
+casualties occurred, and those instantly fatal. As my orderly stood
+leaning on a comrade's shoulder, the head of the latter was shot off. At
+last I myself felt a sudden blow in the side, as if from some
+prize-fighter, doubling me up for a moment, while I sank upon a seat. It
+proved afterwards to have been produced by the grazing of a ball, which,
+without tearing a garment, had yet made a large part of my side black
+and blue, leaving a sensation of paralysis which made it difficult to
+stand. Supporting myself on Captain Rogers, I tried to comprehend what
+had happened, and I remember being impressed by an odd feeling that I
+had now got my share, and should henceforth be a great deal safer
+than any of the rest. I am told that this often follows one's first
+experience of a wound.
+
+But this immediate contest, sharp as it was, proved brief; a turn in the
+river enabled us to use our stern gun, and we soon glided into the
+comparative shelter of Wiltown Bluff. There, however, we were to
+encounter the danger of shipwreck, superadded to that of fight. When the
+passage through the piles was first cleared, it had been marked by
+stakes, lest the rising tide should cover the remaining piles, and make
+it difficult to run the passage. But when we again reached it, the
+stakes had somehow been knocked away, the piles were just covered by the
+swift current, and the little tug-boat was aground upon them. She came
+off easily, however, with our aid, and, when we in turn essayed the
+passage, we grounded also, but more firmly. We getting off at last, and
+making the passage, the tug again became lodged, when nearly past
+danger, and all our efforts proved powerless to pull her through. I
+therefore dropped down below, and sent the John Adams to her aid, while
+I superintended the final recall of the pickets, and the embarkation of
+the remaining refugees.
+
+While thus engaged, I felt little solicitude about the boats above. It
+was certain that the John Adams could safely go close to the piles on
+the lower side, that she was very strong, and that the other was very
+light. Still, it was natural to cast some anxious glances up the river,
+and it was with surprise that I presently saw a canoe descending, which
+contained Major Strong. Coming on board, he told me with some excitement
+that the tug could not possibly be got off, and he wished for orders.
+
+It was no time to consider whether it was not his place to have given
+orders, instead of going half a mile to seek them. I was by this time
+so far exhausted that everything seemed to pass by me as by one in a
+dream; but I got into a boat, pushed up stream, met presently the John
+Adams returning, and was informed by the officer in charge of the
+Connecticut battery that he had abandoned the tug, and--worse news yet
+--that his guns had been thrown overboard. It seemed to me then, and
+has always seemed, that this sacrifice was utterly needless, because,
+although the captain of the John Adams had refused to risk his vessel
+by going near enough to receive the guns, he should have been
+compelled to do so. Though the thing was done without my knowledge,
+and beyond my reach, yet, as commander of the expedition, I was
+technically responsible. It was hard to blame a lieutenant when his
+senior had shrunk from a decision, and left him alone; nor was it easy
+to blame Major Strong, whom I knew to be a man of personal courage
+though without much decision of character. He was subsequently tried
+by court-martial and acquitted, after which he resigned, and was lost
+at sea on his way home.
+
+The tug, being thus abandoned, must of course be burned to prevent her
+falling into the enemy's hands. Major Strong went with prompt
+fearlessness to do this, at my order; after which he remained on the
+Enoch Dean, and I went on board the John Adams, being compelled to
+succumb at last, and transfer all remaining responsibility to Captain
+Trowbridge. Exhausted as I was, I could still observe, in a vague way,
+the scene around me. Every available corner of the boat seemed like some
+vast auction-room of second-hand goods. Great piles of bedding and
+bundles lay on every side, with black heads emerging and black forms
+reclining in every stage of squalidness. Some seemed ill, or wounded, or
+asleep, others were chattering eagerly among themselves, singing,
+praying, or soliloquizing on joys to come. "Bress de Lord," I heard one
+woman say, "I spec' I got salt victual now,--notin' but fresh victual
+dese six months, but Ise get salt victual now,"--thus reversing, under
+pressure of the salt-embargo, the usual anticipations of voyagers.
+
+Trowbridge told me, long after, that, on seeking a fan for my benefit,
+he could find but one on board. That was in the hands of a fat old
+"aunty," who had just embarked, and sat on an enormous bundle of her
+goods, in everybody's way, fanning herself vehemently, and ejaculating,
+as her gasping breath would permit, "Oh! Do, Jesus! Oh! Do, Jesus!" when
+the captain abruptly disarmed her of the fan, and left her continuing
+her pious exercises.
+
+Thus we glided down the river in the waning light. Once more we
+encountered a battery, making five in all; I could hear the guns of
+the assailants, and could not distinguish the explosion of their
+shells from the answering throb of our own guns. The kind
+Quartermaster kept bringing me news of what occurred, like Rebecca in
+Front-de-Bceuf s castle, but discreetly withholding any actual
+casualties. Then all faded into safety and sleep; and we reached
+Beaufort in the morning, after thirty-six hours of absence. A kind
+friend, who acted in South Carolina a nobler part amid tragedies than
+in any of her early stage triumphs, met us with an ambulance at the
+wharf, and the prisoners, the wounded, and the dead were duly
+attended.
+
+The reader will not care for any personal record of convalescence;
+though, among the general military laudations of whiskey, it is worth
+while to say that one life was saved, in the opinion of my surgeons, by
+an habitual abstinence from it, leaving no food for peritoneal
+inflammation to feed upon. The able-bodied men who had joined us were,
+sent to aid General Gillmore in the trenches, while their families were
+established in huts and tents on St. Helena Island. A year after,
+greatly to the delight of the regiment, in taking possession of a
+battery which they had helped to capture on James Island, they found in
+their hands the selfsame guns which they had seen thrown overboard from
+the Governor Milton. They then felt that their account with the enemy
+was squared, and could proceed to further operations.
+
+Before the war, how great a thing seemed the rescue of even one man from
+slavery; and since the war has emancipated all, how little seems the
+liberation of two hundred! But no one then knew how the contest might
+end; and when I think of that morning sunlight, those emerald fields,
+those thronging numbers, the old women with then- prayers, and the
+little boys with then: living burdens, I know that the day was worth all
+it cost, and more.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 8
+The Baby of the Regiment
+
+
+We were in our winter camp on Port Royal Island. It was a lovely
+November morning, soft and spring-like; the mocking-birds were singing,
+and the cotton-fields still white with fleecy pods. Morning drill was
+over, the men were cleaning their guns and singing very happily; the
+officers were in their tents, reading still more happily their letters
+just arrived from home. Suddenly I heard a knock at my tent-door, and
+the latch clicked. It was the only latch in camp, and I was very proud
+of it, and the officers always clicked it as loudly as possible, in
+order to gratify my feelings. The door opened, and the Quartermaster
+thrust in the most beaming face I ever saw.
+
+"Colonel," said he, "there are great news for the regiment. My wife and
+baby are coming by the next steamer!"
+
+"Baby!" said I, in amazement. "Q. M., you are beside yourself." (We
+always called the Quartermaster Q. M. for shortness.) "There was a pass
+sent to your wife, but nothing was ever said about a baby. Baby indeed!"
+
+"But the baby was included in the pass," replied the triumphant
+father-of-a-family. "You don't suppose my wife would come down here
+without her baby! Besides, the pass itself permits her to bring
+necessary baggage, and is not a baby six months old necessary baggage?"
+
+"But, my dear fellow," said I, rather anxiously, "how can you make the
+little thing comfortable in a tent, amidst these rigors of a South
+Carolina winter, when it is uncomfortably hot for drill at noon, and ice
+forms by your bedside at night?"
+
+"Trust me for that," said the delighted papa, and went off whistling. I
+could hear him telling the same news to three others, at least, before
+he got to his own tent.
+
+That day the preparations began, and soon his abode was a wonder of
+comfort. There were posts and rafters, and a raised floor, and a great
+chimney, and a door with hinges,--every luxury except a latch, and that
+he could not have, for mine was the last that could be purchased. One of
+the regimental carpenters was employed to make a cradle, and another to
+make a bedstead high enough for the cradle to go under. Then there must
+be a bit of red carpet beside the bedstead, and thus the progress of
+splendor went on. The wife of one of the colored sergeants was engaged
+to act as nursery-maid. She was a very respectable young woman; the only
+objection to her being that she smoked a pipe. But we thought that
+perhaps Baby might not dislike tobacco; and if she did, she would have
+excellent opportunities to break the pipe in pieces.
+
+In due time the steamer arrived, and Baby and her mother were among
+the passengers. The little recruit was soon settled in her new cradle,
+and slept in it as if she had never known any other. The sergeant's
+wife soon had her on exhibition through the neighborhood, and from
+that time forward she was quite a queen among us. She had sweet blue
+eyes and pretty brown hair, with round, dimpled cheeks, and that
+perfect dignity which is so beautiful in a baby. She hardly ever
+cried, and was not at all timid. She would go to anybody, and yet did
+not encourage any romping from any but the most intimate friends. She
+always wore a warm long-sleeved scarlet cloak with a hood, and in this
+costume was carried or "toted," as the soldiers said, all about the
+camp. At "guard-mounting" in the morning, when the men who are to go
+on guard duty for the day are drawn up to be inspected, Baby was
+always there, to help inspect them. She did not say much, but she eyed
+them very closely, and seemed fully to appreciate their bright
+buttons. Then the Officer-of-the-Day, who appears at guard-mounting
+with his sword and sash, and comes afterwards to the Colonel's tent
+for orders, would come and speak to Baby on his way, and receive her
+orders first. When the time came for drill she was usually present to
+watch the troops; and when the drum beat for dinner she liked to see
+the long row of men in each company march up to the cookhouse, in
+single file, each with tin cup and plate.
+
+During the day, in pleasant weather, she might be seen in her nurse's
+arms, about the company streets, the centre of an admiring circle, her
+scarlet costume looking very pretty amidst the shining black cheeks and
+neat blue uniforms of the soldiers. At "dress-parade," just before
+sunset, she was always an attendant. As I stood before the regiment, I
+could see the little spot of red out of the corner of my eye, at one end
+of the long line of men; and I looked with so much interest for her
+small person, that, instead of saying at the proper time, "Attention,
+Battalion! Shoulder arms!--it is a wonder that I did not say, "Shoulder
+babies!"
+
+Our little lady was very impartial, and distributed her kind looks to
+everybody. She had not the slightest prejudice against color, and did
+not care in the least whether her particular friends were black or
+white. Her especial favorites, I think, were the drummer-boys, who were
+not my favorites by any means, for they were a roguish set of scamps,
+and gave more trouble than all the grown men in the regiment. I think
+Annie liked them because they were small, and made a noise, and had red
+caps like her hood, and red facings on their jackets, and also because
+they occasionally stood on their heads for her amusement. After
+dress-parade the whole drum-corps would march to the great flag-staff,
+and wait till just sunset-time, when they would beat "the retreat," and
+then the flag would be hauled down,--a great festival for Annie.
+Sometimes the Sergeant-Major would wrap her in the great folds of the
+flag, after it was taken down, and she would peep out very prettily from
+amidst the stars and stripes, like a new-born Goddess of Liberty.
+
+About once a month, some inspecting officer was sent to the camp by the
+general in command, to see to the condition of everything in the
+regiment, from bayonets to buttons. It was usually a long and tiresome
+process, and, when everything else was done, I used to tell the officer
+that I had one thing more for him to inspect, which was peculiar to our
+regiment. Then I would send for Baby to be exhibited, and I never saw an
+inspecting officer, old or young, who did not look pleased at the sudden
+appearance of the little, fresh, smiling creature,--a flower in the midst
+of war. And Annie in her turn would look at them, with the true baby
+dignity La her face,--that deep, earnest look which babies often have,
+and which people think so wonderful when Raphael paints it, although
+they might often see just the same expression in the faces of their own
+darlings at home.
+
+Meanwhile Annie seemed to like the camp style of housekeeping very much.
+Her father's tent was double, and he used the front apartment for his
+office, and the inner room for parlor and bedroom; while the nurse had a
+separate tent and wash-room behind all. I remember that, the first time
+I went there in the evening, it was to borrow some writing-paper; and
+while Baby's mother was hunting for it in the front tent, I heard a
+great cooing and murmuring in the inner room. I asked if Annie was still
+awake, and her mother told me to go in and see. Pushing aside the canvas
+door, I entered. No sign of anybody was to be seen; but a variety of
+soft little happy noises seemed to come from some unseen corner. Mrs. C.
+came quietly in, pulled away the counterpane of her own bed, and drew
+out the rough cradle where lay the little damsel, perfectly happy, and
+wider awake than anything but a baby possibly can be. She looked as if
+the seclusion of a dozen family bedsteads would not be enough to
+discourage her spirits, and I saw that camp life was likely to suit her
+very well.
+
+A tent can be kept very warm, for it is merely a house with a thinner
+wall than usual; and I do not think that Baby felt the cold much more
+than if she had been at home that winter. The great trouble is, that a
+tent-chimney, not being built very high, is apt to smoke when the wind
+is in a certain direction; and when that happens it is hardly possible
+to stay inside. So we used to build the chimneys of some tents on the
+east side, and those of others on the west, and thus some of the tents
+were always comfortable. I have seen Baby's mother running in a hard
+rain, with little Red-Riding-Hood in her arms, to take refuge with the
+Adjutant's wife, when every other abode was full of smoke; and I must
+admit that there were one or two windy days that season when nobody
+could really keep warm, and Annie had to remain ignomini-ously in her
+cradle, with as many clothes on as possible, for almost the whole
+time.
+
+The Quartermaster's tent was very attractive to us in the evening. I
+remember that once, on passing near it after nightfall, I heard our
+Major's fine voice singing Methodist hymns within, and Mrs. C.'s sweet
+tones chiming in. So I peeped through the outer door. The fire was
+burning very pleasantly in the inner tent, and the scrap of new red
+carpet made the floor look quite magnificent. The Major sat on a box,
+our surgeon on a stool; "Q. M." and his wife, and the Adjutant's wife,
+and one of the captains, were all sitting on the bed, singing as well as
+they knew how; and the baby was under the bed. Baby had retired for the
+night, was overshadowed, suppressed, sat upon; the singing went on, and
+she had wandered away into her own land of dreams, nearer to heaven,
+perhaps, than any pitch their voices could attain. I went in, and joined
+the party. Presently the music stopped, and another officer was sent
+for, to sing some particular song. At this pause the invisible innocent
+waked a little, and began to cluck and coo.
+
+"It's the kitten," exclaimed somebody.
+
+"It's my baby!" exclaimed Mrs. C. triumphantly, in that tone of
+unfailing personal pride which belongs to young mothers.
+
+The people all got up from the bed for a moment, while Annie was
+pulled from beneath, wide awake and placid as usual; and she sat in
+one lap or another during the rest of the concert, sometimes winking
+at the candle, but usually listening to the songs, with a calm and
+critical expression, as if she could make as much noise as any of
+them, whenever she saw fit to try. Not a sound did she make, however,
+except one little soft sneeze, which led to an immediate flood-tide of
+red shawl, covering every part of her but the forehead. But I soon
+hinted that the concert had better be ended, because I knew from
+observation that the small damsel had Carefully watched a regimental
+inspection and a brigade drill on that day, and that an interval of
+repose was certainly necessary.
+
+Annie did not long remain the only baby in camp. One day, on going out
+to the stables to look at a horse, I heard a sound of baby-talk,
+addressed by some man to a child near by, and, looking round the corner
+of a tent, I saw that one of the hostlers had something black and round,
+lying on the sloping side of a tent, with which he was playing very
+eagerly. It proved to be his baby, a plump, shiny thing, younger than
+Annie; and I never saw a merrier picture than the happy father
+frolicking with his child, while the mother stood quietly by. This was
+Baby Number Two, and she stayed in camp several weeks, the two innocents
+meeting each other every day, in the placid indifference that belonged
+to their years; both were happy little healthy things, and it never
+seemed to cross their minds that there was any difference in their
+complexions. As I said before, Annie was not troubled by any prejudice
+in regard to color, nor do I suppose that the other little maiden was.
+
+Annie enjoyed the tent-life very much; but when we were Sent out on
+picket soon after, she enjoyed it still more. Our head-quarters were
+at a deserted plantation house, with one large parlor, a dining-room,
+and a few bedrooms. Baby's father and mother had a room up stairs,
+with a stove whose pipe went straight out at the window. This was
+quite comfortable, though half the windows were broken, and there was
+no glass and no glazier to mend them. The windows of the large parlor
+were in much the same condition, though we had an immense fireplace,
+where we had a bright fire whenever it was cold, and always in the
+evening. The walls of this room were very dirty, and it took our
+ladies several days to cover all the unsightly places with wreaths and
+hangings of evergreen. In the performance Baby took an active part.
+Her duties consisted in sitting in a great nest of evergreen, pulling
+and fingering the fragrant leaves, and occasionally giving a little
+cry of glee when she had accomplished some piece of decided mischief.
+
+There was less entertainment to be found in the camp itself at this
+time; but the household at head-quarters was larger than Baby had been
+accustomed to. We had a great deal of company, moreover, and she had
+quite a gay life of it. She usually made her appearance in the large
+parlor soon after breakfast; and to dance her for a few moments in our
+arms was one of the first daily duties of each one. Then the morning
+reports began to arrive from the different outposts,--a mounted officer
+or courier coming in from each place, dismounting at the door, and
+clattering in with jingling arms and spurs, each a new excitement for
+Annie. She usually got some attention from any officer who came,
+receiving with her wonted dignity any daring caress. When the messengers
+had ceased to be interesting, there were always the horses to look at,
+held or tethered under the trees beside the sunny _piazza_. After the
+various couriers had been received, other messengers would be despatched
+to the town, seven miles away, and Baby had all the excitement of their
+mounting and departure. Her father was often one of the riders, and
+would sometimes seize Annie for a good-by kiss, place her on the saddle
+before him, gallop her round the house once or twice, and then give her
+back to her nurse's arms again. She was perfectly fearless, and such
+boisterous attentions never frightened her, nor did they ever interfere
+with her sweet, infantine self-possession.
+
+After the riding-parties had gone, there was the _piazza_ still for
+entertainment, with a sentinel pacing up and down before it; but Annie
+did not enjoy the sentinel, though his breastplate and buttons shone
+like gold, so much as the hammock which always hung swinging between
+the pillars. It was a pretty hammock, with great open meshes; and she
+delighted to lie in it, and have the netting closed above her, so that
+she could only be seen through the apertures. I can see her now, the
+fresh little rosy thing, in her blue and scarlet wrappings, with one
+round and dimpled arm thrust forth through the netting, and the other
+grasping an armful of blushing roses and fragrant magnolias. She
+looked like those pretty French bas-reliefs of Cupids imprisoned in
+baskets, and peeping through. That hammock was a very useful
+appendage; it was a couch for us, a cradle for Baby, a nest for the
+kittens; and we had, moreover, a little hen, which tried to roost
+there every night.
+
+When the mornings were colder, and the stove up stairs smoked the wrong
+way, Baby was brought down in a very incomplete state of toilet, and
+finished her dressing by the great fire. We found her bare shoulders
+very becoming, and she was very much interested in her own little pink
+toes. After a very slow dressing, she had a still slower breakfast out
+of a tin cup of warm milk, of which she generally spilt a good deal, as
+she had much to do in watching everybody who came into the room, and
+seeing that there was no mischief done. Then she would be placed on the
+floor, on our only piece of carpet, and the kittens would be brought in
+for her to play with.
+
+We had, at different times, a variety of pets, of whom Annie did not
+take much notice. Sometimes we had young partridges, caught by the
+drummer-boys in trap-cages. The children called them "Bob and Chloe,"
+because the first notes of the male and female sound like those names.
+One day I brought home an opossum, with her blind bare little young
+clinging to the droll pouch where their mothers keep them. Sometimes we
+had pretty green lizards, their color darkening or deepening, like that
+of chameleons, in light or shade. But the only pets that took Baby's
+fancy were the kittens. They perfectly delighted her, from the first
+moment she saw them; they were the only things younger than herself that
+she had ever beheld, and the only things softer than themselves that her
+small hands had grasped. It was astonishing to see how much the kittens
+would endure from her. They could scarcely be touched by any one else
+without mewing; but when Annie seized one by the head and the other by
+the tail, and rubbed them violently together, they did not make a sound.
+I suppose that a baby's grasp is really soft, even if it seems
+ferocious, and so it gives less pain than one would think. At any rate,
+the little animals had the best of it very soon; for they entirely
+outstripped Annie in learning to walk, and they could soon scramble away
+beyond her reach, while she sat in a sort of dumb despair, unable to
+comprehend why anything so much smaller than herself should be so much
+nimbler. Meanwhile, the kittens would sit up and look at her with the
+most provoking indifference, just out of arm's length, until some of us
+would take pity on the young lady, and toss her furry playthings back to
+her again. "Little baby," she learned to call them; and these were the
+very first words she spoke.
+
+Baby had evidently a natural turn for war, further cultivated by an
+intimate knowledge of drills and parades. The nearer she came to actual
+conflict the better she seemed to like it, peaceful as her own little
+ways might be. Twice, at least, while she was with us on picket, we had
+alarms from the Rebel troops, who would bring down cannon to the
+opposite side of the Ferry, about two miles beyond us, and throw shot
+and shell over upon our side. Then the officer at the Ferry would think
+that there was to be an attack made, and couriers would be sent, riding
+to and fro, and the men would all be called to arms in a hurry, and the
+ladies at headquarters would all put on their best bonnets and come down
+stairs, and the ambulance would be made ready to carry them to a place
+of safety before the expected fight. On such occasions Baby was in all
+her glory. She shouted with delight at being suddenly uncribbed and
+thrust into her little scarlet cloak, and brought down stairs, at an
+utterly unusual and improper hour, to a _piazza_ with lights and people
+and horses and general excitement. She crowed and gurgled and made
+gestures with her little fists, and screamed out what seemed to be her
+advice on the military situation, as freely as if she had been a
+newspaper editor. Except that it was rather difficult to understand her
+precise direction, I do not know but the whole Rebel force might have
+been captured through her plans. And at any rate, I should much rather
+obey her orders than those of some generals whom I have known; for she
+at least meant no harm, and would lead one into no mischief.
+
+However, at last the danger, such as it was, would be all over, and
+the ladies would be induced to go peacefully to bed again; and Annie
+would retreat with them to her ignoble cradle, very much disappointed,
+and looking vainly back at the more martial scene below. The next
+morning she would seem to have forgotten all about it, and would spill
+her bread and milk by the fire as if nothing had happened.
+
+I suppose we hardly knew, at the time, how large a part of the sunshine
+of our daily lives was contributed by dear little Annie. Yet, when I now
+look back on that pleasant Southern home, she seems as essential a part
+of it as the mocking-birds or the magnolias, and I cannot convince
+myself that in returning to it I should not find her there. But Annie
+went back, with the spring, to her Northern birthplace, and then passed
+away from this earth before her little feet had fairly learned to tread
+its paths; and when I meet her next it must be in some world where there
+is triumph without armies, and where innocence is trained in scenes of
+peace. I know, however, that her little life, short as it seemed, was a
+blessing to us all, giving a perpetual image of serenity and sweetness,
+recalling the lovely atmosphere of far-off homes, and holding us by
+unsuspected ties to whatsoever things were pure.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 9
+Negro Spirituals
+
+
+The war brought to some of us, besides its direct experiences, many a
+strange fulfilment of dreams of other days. For instance, the present
+writer had been a faithful student of the Scottish ballads, and had
+always envied Sir Walter the delight of tracing them out amid their own
+heather, and of writing them down piecemeal from the lips of aged
+crones. It was a strange enjoyment, therefore, to be suddenly brought
+into the midst of a kindred world of unwritten songs, as simple and
+indigenous as the Border Minstrelsy, more uniformly plaintive, almost
+always more quaint, and often as essentially poetic.
+
+This interest was rather increased by the fact that I had for many years
+heard of this class of songs under the name of "Negro Spirituals," and
+had even heard some of them sung by friends from South Carolina. I could
+now gather on their own soil these strange plants, which I had before
+seen as in museums alone. True, the individual songs rarely coincided;
+there was a line here, a chorus there,--just enough to fix the class, but
+this was unmistakable. It was not strange that they differed, for the
+range seemed almost endless, and South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida
+seemed to have nothing but the generic character in common, until all
+were mingled in the united stock of camp-melodies.
+
+Often in the starlit evening, I have returned from some lonely ride by
+the swift river, or on the plover-haunted barrens, and, entering the
+camp, have silently approached some glimmering fire, round which the
+dusky figures moved in the rhythmical barbaric dance the negroes call a
+"shout," chanting, often harshly, but always in the most perfect time,
+some monotonous refrain. Writing down in the darkness, as I best
+could,--perhaps with my hand in the safe covert of my pocket,--the words
+of the song, I have afterwards carried it to my tent, like some captured
+bird or insect, and then, after examination, put it by. Or, summoning
+one of the men at some period of leisure,--Corporal Robert Sutton, for
+instance, whose iron memory held all the details of a song as if it were
+a ford or a forest,--I have completed the new specimen by supplying the
+absent parts. The music I could only retain by ear, and though the more
+common strains were repeated often enough to fix their impression, there
+were others that occurred only once or twice.
+
+The words will be here given, as nearly as possible, in the original
+dialect; and if the spelling seems sometimes inconsistent, or the
+misspelling insufficient, it is because I could get no nearer. I wished
+to avoid what seems to me the only error of Lowell's "Biglow Papers" in
+respect to dialect, the occasional use of an extreme misspelling, which
+merely confuses the eye, without taking us any closer to the peculiarity
+of sound.
+
+The favorite song in camp was the following, sung with no accompaniment
+but the measured clapping of hands and the clatter of many feet. It was
+sung perhaps twice as often as any other. This was partly due to the
+fact that it properly consisted of a chorus alone, with which the verses
+of other songs might be combined at random.
+
+I. HOLD YOUR LIGHT.
+
+ "Hold your light, Brudder Robert,
+ Hold your light,
+ Hold your light on Canaan's shore.
+ "What make ole Satan for follow me so?
+ Satan ain't got notin' for do wid me.
+ Hold your light,
+ Hold your light,
+ Hold your light on Canaan's shore."
+
+This would be sung for half an hour at a time, perhaps each person
+present being named in turn. It seemed the simplest primitive type of
+"spiritual." The next in popularity was almost as elementary, and, like
+this, named successively each one of the circle. It was, however, much
+more resounding and convivial in its music.
+
+II. BOUND TO GO.
+
+ "Jordan River, I'm bound to go,
+ Bound to go, bound to go,--
+ Jordan River, I'm bound to go,
+ And bid 'em fare ye well.
+
+ "My Brudder Robert, I'm bound to go,
+ Bound to go," &c.
+
+ "My Sister Lucy, I'm bound to go,
+ Bound to go," &c.
+
+Sometimes it was "tink 'em" (think them) "fare ye well." The _ye_ was
+so detached that I thought at first it was "very" or "vary well."
+
+Another picturesque song, which seemed immensely popular, was at first
+very bewildering to me. I could not make out the first words of the
+chorus, and called it the "Roman-dar," being reminded of some Romaic
+song which I had formerly heard. That association quite fell in with the
+Orientalism of the new tent-life.
+
+III. ROOM IN THERE.
+
+ "O, my mudder is gone! my mudder is gone!
+ My mudder is gone into heaven, my Lord!
+ I can't stay behind!
+ Dere's room in dar, room in dar,
+ Room in dar, in de heaven, my Lord!
+ I can't stay behind!
+ Can't stay behind, my dear,
+ I can't stay behind!
+
+ "O, my fader is gone!" &c.
+
+ "O, de angels are gone!" &c.
+
+ "O, I'se been on de road! I'se been on de road!
+ I'se been on de road into heaven, my Lord!
+ I can't stay behind!
+ O, room in dar, room in dar,
+ Room in dar, in de heaven, my Lord!
+ I can't stay behind!
+
+By this time every man within hearing, from oldest to youngest, would be
+wriggling and shuffling, as if through some magic piper's bewitchment;
+for even those who at first affected contemptuous indifference would be
+drawn into the vortex erelong.
+
+Next to these in popularity ranked a class of songs belonging
+emphatically to the Church Militant, and available for camp purposes
+with very little strain upon their symbolism. This, for instance, had a
+true companion-in-arms heartiness about it, not impaired by the feminine
+invocation at the end.
+
+IV. HAIL MARY.
+
+ "One more valiant soldier here,
+ One more valiant soldier here,
+ One more valiant soldier here,
+ To help me bear de cross.
+ O hail, Mary, hail!
+ Hail, Mary, hail!
+ Hail, Mary, hail!
+ To help me bear de cross."
+
+I fancied that the original reading might have been "soul," instead of
+"soldier,"--with some other syllable inserted to fill out the
+metre,--and that the "Hail, Mary," might denote a Roman Catholic
+origin, as I had several men from St. Augustine who held in a dim way
+to that faith. It was a very ringing song, though not so grandly
+jubilant as the next, which was really impressive as the singers
+pealed it out, when marching or rowing or embarking.
+
+V. MY ARMY CROSS OVER.
+
+ "My army cross over,
+ My army cross over,
+ O, Pharaoh's army drowndedl
+ My army cross over.
+
+ "We'll cross de mighty river,
+ My army cross over;
+ We'll cross de river Jordan,
+ My army cross over;
+ We'll cross de danger water,
+ My army cross over;
+ We'll cross de mighty Myo,
+ My army cross over. _(Thrice.)_
+ O, Pharaoh's army drowndedl
+ My army cross over."
+
+I could get no explanation of the "mighty Myo," except that one of the
+old men thought it meant the river of death. Perhaps it is an African
+word. In the Cameroon dialect, "Mawa" signifies "to die."
+
+The next also has a military ring about it, and the first line is well
+matched by the music. The rest is conglomerate, and one or two lines
+show a more Northern origin. "Done" is a Virginia shibboleth, quite
+distinct from the "been" which replaces it in South Carolina. Yet one of
+their best choruses, without any fixed words, was, "De bell done
+ringing," for which, in proper South Carolina dialect, would have been
+substituted, "De bell been a-ring." This refrain may have gone South
+with our army.
+
+VI. RIDE IN, KIND SAVIOUR.
+
+ "Ride in, kind Saviour!
+ No man can hinder me.
+ O, Jesus is a mighty man!
+ No man, &c.
+ We're marching through Virginny fields.
+ No man, &c.
+ O, Satan is a busy man,
+ No man, &c.
+ And he has his sword and shield,
+ No man, &c.
+ O, old Secesh done come and gone!
+ No man can hinder me."
+
+Sometimes they substituted "binder _we_," which was more spicy to the
+ear, and more in keeping with the usual head-over-heels arrangement of
+their pronouns.
+
+Almost all their songs were thoroughly religious in their tone, however
+quaint then: expression, and were in a minor key, both as to words and
+music. The attitude is always the same, and, as a commentary on the life
+of the race, is infinitely pathetic. Nothing but patience for this
+life,--nothing but triumph in the next. Sometimes the present
+predominates, sometimes the future; but the combination is always
+implied. In the following, for instance, we hear simply the patience.
+
+VII. THIS WORLD ALMOST DONE.
+
+ "Brudder, keep your lamp trimmin' and a-burnin',
+ Keep your lamp trimmin' and a-burnin',
+ Keep your lamp trimmin' and a-burnin',
+ For dis world most done.
+ So keep your lamp, &c.
+ Dis world most done."
+
+But in the next, the final reward of patience is proclaimed as
+plaintively.
+
+VIII. I WANT TO GO HOME.
+
+ "Dere's no rain to wet you,
+ O, yes, I want to go home.
+ Dere's no sun to burn you,
+ O, yes, I want to go home;
+ O, push along, believers,
+ O, yes, &c.
+ Dere's no hard trials,
+ O, yes, &c.
+ Dere's no whips a-crackin',
+ O, yes, &c.
+ My brudder on de wayside,
+ O, yes, &c.
+ O, push along, my brudder,
+ O, yes, &c.
+ Where dere's no stormy weather,
+ O, yes, &c.
+ Dere's no tribulation,
+ O, yes, &c.
+
+This next was a boat-song, and timed well with the tug of the oar.
+
+IX. THE COMING DAY
+
+ "I want to go to Canaan,
+ I want to go to Canaan,
+ I want to go to Canaan,
+ To meet 'em at de comin' day.
+ O, remember, let me go to Canaan, _(Thrice.)_
+ To meet "em, &c.
+ O brudder, let me go to Canaan, _(Thrice.)_
+ To meet 'em, &c.
+ My brudder, you--oh!--remember, _(Thrice.)_
+ To meet 'em at de comin' day."
+
+The following begins with a startling affirmation, yet the last line
+quite outdoes the first. This, too, was a capital boat-song.
+
+X. ONE MORE RIVER.
+
+ "O, Jordan bank was a great old bank,
+ Dere ain't but one more river to cross.
+ We have some valiant soldier here,
+ Dere ain't, &c.
+ O, Jordan stream will never run dry,
+ Dere ain't, &c.
+ Dere's a hill on my leff, and he catch on my right,
+ Dere ain't but one more river to cross."
+
+I could get no explanation of this last riddle, except, "Dat mean, if
+you go on de leff, go to 'struction, and if you go on de right, go to
+God, for sure."
+
+In others, more of spiritual conflict is implied, as in this next
+
+XI. O THE DYING LAMB!
+
+ "I wants to go where Moses trod,
+ O de dying Lamb!
+ For Moses gone to de promised land,
+ O de dying Lamb!
+ To drink from springs dat never run dry,
+ O, &c.
+ Cry O my Lord!
+ O, &c.
+ Before I'll stay in hell one day,
+ O, &c.
+ I'm in hopes to pray my sins away,
+ O, &c.
+ Cry O my Lord!
+ 0,&c.
+ Brudder Moses promised for be dar too,
+ O, &c.
+ To drink from streams dat never run dry,
+ O de dying Lamb!"
+
+In the next, the conflict is at its height, and the lurid imagery of the
+Apocalypse is brought to bear. This book, with the books of Moses,
+constituted their Bible; all that lay between, even the narratives of
+the life of Jesus, they hardly cared to read or to hear.
+
+XII. DOWN IN THE VALLEY.
+
+ "We'll run and never tire,
+ We'll run and never tire,
+ We'll run and never tire,
+ Jesus set poor sinners free.
+ Way down in de valley,
+ Who will rise and go with me?
+ You've heern talk of Jesus,
+ Who set poor sinners free.
+
+ "De lightnin' and de flashin'
+ De lightnin' and de flashin',
+ De lightnin' and de flashin',
+ Jesus set poor shiners free.
+ I can't stand the fire. _(Thrice.)_
+ Jesus set poor sinners free,
+ De green trees a-flamin'. _(Thrice_.)
+ Jesus set poor shiners free,
+ Way down in de valley,
+ Who will rise and go with me?
+ You've heern talk of Jesus
+ Who set poor shiners free."
+
+"De valley" and "de lonesome valley" were familiar words in their
+religious experience. To descend into that region implied the same
+process with the "anxious-seat" of the camp-meeting. When a young girl
+was supposed to enter it, she bound a handkerchief by a peculiar knot
+over her head, and made it a point of honor not to change a single
+garment till the day of her baptism, so that she was sure of being in
+physical readiness for the cleansing rite, whatever her spiritual mood
+might be. More than once, in noticing a damsel thus mystically
+kerchiefed, I have asked some dusky attendant its meaning, and have
+received the unfailing answer,--framed with their usual indifference
+to the genders of pronouns--"He in de lonesome valley, sa."
+
+The next gives the same dramatic conflict, while its detached and
+impersonal refrain gives it strikingly the character of the Scotch and
+Scandinavian ballads.
+
+XIII. CRY HOLY.
+
+ "Cry holy, holy!
+ Look at de people dat is born of God.
+ And I run down de valley, and I run down to pray,
+ Says, look at de people dat is born of God.
+ When I get dar, Cappen Satan was dar,
+ Says, look at, &c.
+ Says, young man, young man, dere's no use for pray,
+ Says, look at, &c.
+ For Jesus is dead, and God gone away,
+ Says, look at, &c.
+ And I made him out a liar, and I went my way,
+ Says, look at, &c.
+ Sing holy, holy!
+
+ "O, Mary was a woman, and he had a one Son,
+ Says, look at, &c.
+ And de Jews and de Romans had him hung,
+ Says, look at, &c. Cry holy, holy!
+
+ "And I tell you, sinner, you had better had pray,
+ Says, look at, &c.
+ For hell is a dark and dismal place,
+ Says, look at, &c.
+
+ And I tell you, sinner, and I wouldn't go dar!
+ Says, look at, &c.
+ Cry holy, holy!"
+
+
+Here is an infinitely quaint description of the length of the heavenly
+road:--
+
+XIV. O'ER THE CROSSING.
+
+ "Vender's my old mudder,
+ Been a-waggin' at de hill so long.
+ It's about time she'll cross over;
+ Get home bimeby.
+ Keep prayin', I do believe
+ We're a long time waggin' o'er de crossin'.
+ Keep prayin', I do believe
+ We'll get home to heaven bimeby.
+
+ "Hear dat mournful thunder
+ Roll from door to door,
+ Calling home God's children;
+ Get home bimeby.
+ Little chil'en, I do believe
+ We're a long time, &c.
+ Little chil'en, I do believe
+ We'll get home, &c.
+
+ "See dat forked lightnin'
+ Flash from tree to tree,
+ Callin' home God's chil'en;
+ Get home bimeby.
+ True believer, I do believe
+ We're a long time, &c.
+ O brudders, I do believe,
+ We'll get home to heaven bimeby."
+
+One of the most singular pictures of future joys, and with fine flavor
+of hospitality about it, was this:--
+
+XV. WALK 'EM EASY.
+
+ "O, walk 'em easy round de heaven,
+ Walk 'em easy round de heaven,
+ Walk 'em easy round de heaven,
+ Dat all de people may join de band.
+ Walk 'em easy round de heaven. (_Thrice_.)
+ O, shout glory till 'em join dat band!"
+
+The chorus was usually the greater part of the song, and often came in
+paradoxically, thus:--
+
+XVI. O YES, LORD.
+
+ "O, must I be like de foolish mans?
+ O yes, Lord!
+ Will build de house on de sandy hill.
+ O yes, Lord!
+ I'll build my house on Zion hill,
+ O yes, Lord!
+ No wind nor rain can blow me down,
+ O yes, Lord!"
+
+The next is very graceful and lyrical, and with more variety of rhythm
+than usual:--
+
+XVII. BOW LOW, MARY.
+
+ "Bow low, Mary, bow low, Martha,
+ For Jesus come and lock de door,
+ And carry de keys away.
+ Sail, sail, over yonder,
+ And view de promised land.
+ For Jesus come, &c.
+ Weep, O Mary, bow low, Martha,
+ For Jesus come, &c.
+ Sail, sail, my true believer;
+ Sail, sail, over yonder;
+ Mary, bow low, Martha, bow low,
+ For Jesus come and lock de door
+ And carry de keys away."
+
+But of all the "spirituals" that which surprised me the most, I
+think,--perhaps because it was that in which external
+nature furnished the images most directly,--was this. With all my
+experience of their ideal ways of speech, I was startled when first I
+came on such a flower of poetry in that dark soil.
+
+XVIH. I KNOW MOON-RISE.
+
+ "I know moon-rise, I know star-rise,
+ Lay dis body down.
+ I walk in de moonlight, I walk in de starlight,
+ To lay dis body down.
+ I'll walk in de graveyard, I'll walk through de graveyard,
+ To lay dis body down.
+ I'll lie in de grave and stretch out my arms;
+ Lay dis body down.
+ I go to de judgment in de evenin' of de day,
+ When I lay dis body down;
+ And my soul and your soul will meet in de day
+ When I lay dis body down."
+
+"I'll lie in de grave and stretch out my arms." Never, it seems to me,
+since man first lived and suffered, was his infinite longing for peace
+uttered more plaintively than in that line.
+
+The next is one of the wildest and most striking of the whole series:
+there is a mystical effect and a passionate striving throughout the
+whole. The Scriptural struggle between Jacob and the angel, which is
+only dimly expressed in the words, seems all uttered in the music. I
+think it impressed my imagination more powerfully than any other of
+these songs.
+
+XIX. WRESTLING JACOB.
+
+ "O wrestlin' Jacob, Jacob, day's a-breakin';
+ I will not let thee go!
+ O wrestlin' Jacob, Jacob, day's a-breakin';
+ He will not let me go!
+ O, I hold my brudder wid a tremblin' hand
+ I would not let him go!
+ I hold my sister wid a tremblin' hand;
+ I would not let her go!
+
+ "O, Jacob do hang from a tremblin' limb,
+ He would not let him go!
+ O, Jacob do hang from a tremblin' limb;
+ De Lord will bless my soul.
+ O wrestlin' Jacob, Jacob," &c.
+
+Of "occasional hymns," properly so called, I noticed but one, a funeral
+hymn for an infant, which is sung plaintively over and over, without
+variety of words.
+
+XX. THE BABY GONE HOME.
+
+ "De little baby gone home,
+ De little baby gone home,
+ De little baby gone along,
+ For to climb up Jacob's ladder.
+ And I wish I'd been dar,
+ I wish I'd been dar,
+ I wish I'd been dar, my Lord,
+ For to climb up Jacob's ladder."
+
+Still simpler is this, which is yet quite sweet and touching.
+
+XXI. JESUS WITH US.
+
+ "He have been wid us, Jesus
+ He still wid us, Jesus,
+ He will be wid us, Jesus,
+ Be wid us to the end."
+
+The next seemed to be a favorite about Christmas time, when meditations
+on "de rollin' year" were frequent among them.
+
+
+XXII. LORD, REMEMBER ME.
+
+ "O do, Lord, remember me!
+ O do, Lord, remember me!
+ O, do remember me, until de year roll round!
+ Do, Lord, remember me!
+
+ "If you want to die like Jesus died,
+ Lay in de grave,
+ You would fold your arms and close your eyes
+ And die wid a free good will.
+
+ "For Death is a simple ting,
+ And he go from door to door,
+ And he knock down some, and he cripple op some,
+ And he leave some here to pray.
+
+ "O do, Lord remember me!
+ O do, Lord, remember me!
+ My old fader's gone till de year roll round;
+ Do, Lord, remember me!"
+
+The next was sung in such an operatic and rollicking way that it was
+quite hard to fancy it a religious performance, which, however, it was.
+I heard it but once.
+
+XXIH. EARLY IN THE MORNING.
+
+ "I meet little Rosa early in de mornin',
+ O Jerusalem! early in de mornin';
+ And I ax her, How you do, my darter?
+ O Jerusalem! early in de mornin'.
+
+ "I meet my mudder early in de mornin',
+ O Jerusalem! &c.
+ And I ax her, How you do, my mudder?
+ O Jerusalem! &c.
+
+ "I meet Brudder Robert early in de mornin',
+ O Jerusalem! &c.
+ And I ax him, How you do, my sonny?
+ O Jerusalem! &c.
+
+ "I meet Tittawisa early in de mornin',
+ O Jerusalem! &c.
+ And I ax her, How you do, my darter?
+ O Jerusalem!" &c.
+
+"Tittawisa" means "Sister Louisa." In songs of this class the name of
+every person present successively appears.
+
+Their best marching song, and one which was invaluable to lift their
+feet along, as they expressed it, was the following. There was a kind of
+spring and lilt to it, quite indescribable by words.
+
+XXIV. GO IN THE WILDERNESS.
+
+ "Jesus call you. Go in de wilderness,
+ Go in de wilderness, go in de wilderness,
+ Jesus call you. Go in de wilderness
+ To wait upon de Lord.
+ Go wait upon de Lord,
+ Go wait upon de Lord,
+ Go wait upon de Lord, my God,
+ He take away de sins of de world.
+
+ "Jesus a-waitin'. Go in de wilderness,
+ Go, &c.
+ All dem chil'en go in de wilderness
+ To wait upon de Lord."
+
+The next was one of those which I had heard in boyish days, brought
+North from Charleston. But the chorus alone was identical; the words
+were mainly different, and those here given are quaint enough.
+
+
+XXV. BLOW YOUR TRUMPET, GABRIEL.
+
+ "O, blow your trumpet, Gabriel,
+ Blow your trumpet louder;
+ And I want dat trumpet to blow me home
+ To my new Jerusalem.
+
+ "De prettiest ting dat ever I done
+ Was to serve de Lord when I was young.
+ So blow your trumpet, Gabriel, &c.
+
+ "O, Satan is a liar, and he conjure too,
+ And if you don't mind, he'll conjure you.
+ So blow your trumpet, Gabriel, &c.
+
+ "O, I was lost in de wilderness.
+ King Jesus hand me de candle down.
+ So blow your trumpet, Gabriel," &c.
+
+The following contains one of those odd transformations of proper names
+with which their Scriptural citations were often enriched. It rivals
+their text, "Paul may plant, and may polish wid water," which I have
+elsewhere quoted, and in which the sainted Apollos would hardly have
+recognized himself.
+
+XXVI. IN THE MORNING.
+
+ "In de mornin',
+ In de mornin',
+ Chil'en? Yes, my Lord!
+ Don't you hear de trumpet sound?
+ If I had a-died when I was young,
+ I never would had de race for run.
+ Don't you hear de trumpet sound?
+
+ "O Sam and Peter was fishin' in de sea,
+ And dey drop de net and follow my Lord.
+ Don't you hear de trumpet sound?
+
+ "Dere's a silver spade for to dig my grave
+ And a golden chain for to let me down.
+ Don't you hear de trumpet sound?
+ In de mornin', In de mornin',
+ Chil'en? Yes, my Lord!
+ Don't you hear de trumpet sound?"
+
+These golden and silver fancies remind one of the King of Spain's
+daughter in "Mother Goose," and the golden apple, and the silver pear,
+which are doubtless themselves but the vestiges of some simple early
+composition like this. The next has a humbler and more domestic style of
+fancy.
+
+XXVII. FARE YE WELL.
+
+ "My true believers, fare ye well,
+ Fare ye well, fare ye well,
+ Fare ye well, by de grace of God,
+ For I'm going home.
+
+ Massa Jesus give me a little broom
+ For to sweep my heart clean,
+ And I will try, by de grace of God,
+ To win my way home."
+
+Among the songs not available for marching, but requiring the
+concentrated enthusiasm of the camp, was "The Ship of Zion," of which
+they had three wholly distinct versions, all quite exuberant and
+tumultuous.
+
+XXVHI. THE SHIP OF ZION.
+
+ "Come along, come along,
+ And let us go home,
+ O, glory, hallelujah?
+ Dis de ole ship o' Zion,
+ Halleloo! Halleloo!
+ Dis de ole ship o' Zion,
+ Hallelujah!
+
+ "She has landed many a tousand,
+ She can land as many more.
+ O, glory, hallelujah! &c.
+
+ "Do you tink she will be able
+ For to take us all home?
+ O, glory, hallelujah! &c.
+
+ "You can tell 'em I'm a comin',
+ Halleloo! Halleloo!
+ You can tell 'em I'm a comin',
+ Hallelujah!
+ Come along, come along," &c.
+
+XXIX. THE SHIP OF ZION. _(Second version.)_
+
+ "Dis de good ole ship o' Zion,
+ Dis de good ole ship o' Zion,
+ Dis de good ole ship o' Zion,
+ And she's makin' for de Promise Land.
+ She hab angels for de sailors, _(Thrice.)_
+ And she's, &c.
+ And how you know dey's angels? _(Thrice.)_
+ And she's, &c.
+ Good Lord, Shall I be one? _(Thrice.)_
+ And she's, &c.
+
+ "Dat ship is out a-sailin', sailin', sailin',
+ And she's, &c.
+ She's a-sailin' mighty steady, steady, steady,
+ And she's, &c.
+ She'll neither reel nor totter, totter, totter,
+ And she's, &c.
+ She's a-sailin' away cold Jordan, Jordan, Jordan,
+ And she's, &c.
+ King Jesus is de captain, captain, captain,
+ And she's makin' for de Promise Land."
+
+
+XXX. THE SHIP OF ZION. _(Third version.)_
+
+ "De Gospel ship is sailin',
+ Hosann--sann.
+ O, Jesus is de captain,
+ Hosann--sann.
+ De angels are de sailors,
+ Hosann--sann.
+ O, is your bundle ready?
+ Hosann--sann.
+ O, have you got your ticket?
+ Hosann--sann."
+
+This abbreviated chorus is given with unspeakable unction.
+
+The three just given are modifications of an old camp-meeting melody;
+and the same may be true of the three following, although I cannot find
+them in the Methodist hymn-books. Each, however, has its characteristic
+modifications, which make it well worth giving. In the second verse of
+this next, for instance, "Saviour" evidently has become "soldier."
+
+XXXI. SWEET MUSIC
+
+ "Sweet music in heaven,
+ Just beginning for to roll.
+ Don't you love God?
+ Glory, hallelujah!
+
+ "Yes, late I heard my soldier say,
+ Come, heavy soul, I am de way.
+ Don't you love God?
+ Glory, hallelujah!
+
+ "I'll go and tell to sinners round
+ What a kind Saviour I have found.
+ Don't you love God?
+ Glory, hallelujah!
+
+ "My grief my burden long has been,
+ Because I was not cease from sin.
+ Don't you love God?
+ Glory, hallelujahl"
+
+XXXII. GOOD NEWS.
+
+ "O, good news! O, good news!
+ De angels brought de tidings down,
+ Just comin' from de trone.
+
+ "As grief from out my soul shall fly,
+ Just comin' from de trone;
+ I'll shout salvation when I die,
+ Good news, O, good news!
+ Just comin' from de trone.
+
+ "Lord, I want to go to heaven when I die,
+ Good news, O, good news! &c.
+
+ "De white folks call us a noisy crew,
+ Good news, O, good news!
+ But dis I know, we are happy too,
+ Just comin' from de trone."
+
+XXXIII. THE HEAVENLY ROAD.
+
+ "You may talk of my name as much as you please,
+ And carry my name abroad,
+ But I really do believe I'm a child of God
+ As I walk in de heavenly road.
+ O, won't you go wid me? _(Thrice.)_
+ For to keep our garments clean.
+
+ "O Satan is a mighty busy ole man,
+ And roll rocks in my way;
+ But Jesus is my bosom friend,
+ And roll 'em out of de way.
+ O, won't you go wid me? _(Thrice.)_
+ For to keep our garments clean.
+
+ "Come, my brudder, if you never did pray,
+ I hope you may pray to-night;
+ For I really believe I'm a child of God
+ As I walk in de heavenly road.
+ O, won't you," &c.
+
+Some of the songs had played an historic part during the war. For
+singing the next, for instance, the negroes had been put in jail in
+Georgetown, S. C., at the outbreak of the Rebellion. "We'll soon be
+free" was too dangerous an assertion; and though the chant was an old
+one, it was no doubt sung with redoubled emphasis during the new events.
+"De Lord will call us home," was evidently thought to be a symbolical
+verse; for, as a little drummer-boy explained to me, showing all his
+white teeth as he sat in the moonlight by the door of my tent, "Dey tink
+_de Lord_ mean for say _de Yankees_."
+
+XXXIV. WE'LL SOON BE FREE.
+
+ "We'll soon be free,
+ We'll soon be free,
+ We'll soon be free,
+ When de Lord will call us home.
+ My brudder, how long,
+ My brudder, how long,
+ My brudder, how long,
+ 'Fore we done sufferin' here?
+ It won't be long _(Thrice.)_
+ 'Fore de Lord will call us home.
+ We'll walk de miry road _(Thrice.)_
+ Where pleasure never dies.
+ We'll walk de golden street _(Thrice.)_
+ Where pleasure never dies.
+ My brudder, how long _(Thrice.)_
+ 'Fore we done sufferin' here?
+ We'll soon be free _(Thrice.)_
+ When Jesus sets me free.
+ We'll fight for liberty _(Thrice.)_
+ When de Lord will call us home."
+
+The suspicion in this case was unfounded, but they had another song to
+which the Rebellion had actually given rise. This was composed by nobody
+knew whom,--though it was the most recent, doubtless, of all these
+"spirituals,"--and had been sung in secret to avoid detection. It is
+certainly plaintive enough. The peck of corn and pint of salt were
+slavery's rations.
+
+XXXV. MANY THOUSAND GO.
+
+ "No more peck o' corn for me,
+ No more, no more,--
+ No more peck o' corn for me,
+ Many tousand go.
+
+ "No more driver's lash for me, _(Twice.)_
+ No more, &c.
+
+ "No more pint o' salt for me, _(Twice_.)
+ No more, &c.
+
+ "No more hundred lash for me, _(Twice_.)
+ No more, &c.
+
+ "No more mistress' call for me,
+ No more, no more,--
+ No more mistress' call for me,
+ Many tousand go."
+
+Even of this last composition, however, we have only the approximate
+date and know nothing of the mode of composition. Allan Ramsay says of
+the Scotch songs, that, no matter who made them, they were soon
+attributed to the minister of the parish whence they sprang. And I
+always wondered, about these, whether they had always a conscious and
+definite origin in some leading mind, or whether they grew by gradual
+accretion, in an almost unconscious way. On this point I could get no
+information, though I asked many questions, until at last, one day
+when I was being rowed across from Beaufort to Ladies' Island, I found
+myself, with delight, on the actual trail of a song. One of the
+oarsmen, a brisk young fellow, not a soldier, on being asked for his
+theory of the matter, dropped out a coy confession. "Some good
+sperituals," he said, "are start jess out o' curiosity. I been a-raise
+a sing, myself, once."
+
+My dream was fulfilled, and I had traced out, not the poem alone, but
+the poet. I implored him to proceed.
+
+"Once we boys," he said, "went for tote some rice and de nigger-driver
+he keep a-callin' on us; and I say, 'O, de ole nigger-driver!' Den
+anudder said, 'Fust ting my mammy tole me was, notin' so bad as
+nigger-driver.' Den I made a sing, just puttin' a word, and den anudder
+word."
+
+Then he began singing, and the men, after listening a moment, joined in
+the chorus, as if it were an old acquaintance, though they evidently had
+never heard it before. I saw how easily a new "sing" took root among them.
+
+XXXVI. THE DRIVER.
+
+ "O, de ole nigger-driver!
+ O, gwine away!
+ Fust ting my mammy tell me,
+ O, gwine away!
+ Tell me 'bout de nigger-driver,
+ O, gwine away!
+ Nigger-driver second devil,
+ O, gwine away!
+ Best ting for do he driver,
+ O, gwine away!
+ Knock he down and spoil he labor,
+ O, gwine away!"
+
+It will be observed that, although this song is quite secular in its
+character, yet its author called it a "spiritual." I heard but two songs
+among them, at any time, to which they would not, perhaps, have given
+this generic name. One of these consisted simply in the endless
+repetition--after the manner of certain college songs--of the mysterious
+line,--
+
+ "Rain fall and wet Becky Lawton."
+
+But who Becky Lawton was, and why she should or should not be wet, and
+whether the dryness was a reward or a penalty, none could say. I got the
+impression that, in either case, the event was posthumous, and that
+there was some tradition of grass not growing over the grave of a
+sinner; but even this was vague, and all else vaguer.
+
+The other song I heard but once, on a morning when a squad of men came
+in from picket duty, and chanted it in the most rousing way. It had been
+a stormy and comfortless night, and the picket station was very exposed.
+It still rained in the morning when I strolled to the edge of the camp,
+looking out for the men, and wondering how they had stood it. Presently
+they came striding along the road, at a great pace, with their shining
+rubber blankets worn as cloaks around them, the rain streaming from
+these and from then- equally shining faces, which were almost all upon
+the broad grin, as they pealed out this remarkable ditty:--
+
+HANGMAN JOHNNY.
+
+ "O, dey call me Hangman Johnny!
+ O, ho! O, ho!
+ But I never hang nobody,
+ O, hang, boys, hang!
+ O dey, call me Hangman Johnny!
+ O, ho! O, ho!
+ But we'll all hang togedder,
+ O, hang, boys, hang!"
+
+My presence apparently checked the performance of another verse,
+beginning, "De buckra 'list for money," apparently in reference to the
+controversy about the pay-question, then just beginning, and to the more
+mercenary aims they attributed to the white soldiers. But "Hangman
+Johnny" remained always a myth as inscrutable as "Becky Lawton."
+
+As they learned all their songs by ear, they often strayed into wholly
+new versions, which sometimes became popular, and entirely banished the
+others. This was amusingly the case, for instance, with one phrase in
+the popular camp-song of "Marching Along," which was entirely new to
+them until our quartermaster taught it to them, at my request. The
+words, "Gird on the armor," were to them a stumbling-block, and no
+wonder, until some ingenious ear substituted, "Guide on de army," which
+was at once accepted, and became universal.
+
+ "We'll guide on de army, and be marching along"
+
+is now the established version on the Sea Islands.
+
+These quaint religious songs were to the men more than a source of
+relaxation; they were a stimulus to courage and a tie to heaven. I
+never overheard in camp a profane or vulgar song. With the trifling
+exceptions given, all had a religious motive, while the most secular
+melody could not have been more exciting. A few youths from Savannah,
+who were comparatively men of the world, had learned some of the
+"Ethiopian Minstrel" ditties, imported from the North. These took no
+hold upon the mass; and, on the other hand, they sang reluctantly,
+even on Sunday, the long and short metres of the hymn-books, always
+gladly yielding to the more potent excitement of their own
+"spirituals." By these they could sing themselves, as had their
+fathers before them, out of the contemplation of their own low estate,
+into the sublime scenery of the Apocalypse. I remember that this
+minor-keyed pathos used to seem to me almost too sad to dwell upon,
+while slavery seemed destined to last for generations; but now that
+their patience has had its perfect work, history cannot afford to lose
+this portion of its record. There is no parallel instance of an
+oppressed race thus sustained by the religious sentiment alone. These
+songs are but the vocal expression of the simplicity of their faith
+and the sublimity of their long resignation.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 10
+Life at Camp Shaw
+
+
+The Edisto expedition cost me the health and strength of several years.
+I could say, long after, in the words of one of the men, "I'se been a
+sickly person, eber since de expeditious." Justice to a strong
+constitution and good habits compels me, however, to say that, up to the
+time of my injury, I was almost the only officer in the regiment who had
+not once been off duty from illness. But at last I had to yield, and
+went North for a month.
+
+We heard much said, during the war, of wounded officers who stayed
+unreasonably long at home. I think there were more instances of those
+who went back too soon. Such at least was my case. On returning to the
+regiment I found a great accumulation of unfinished business; every
+member of the field and staff was prostrated by illness or absent on
+detailed service; two companies had been sent to Hilton Head on
+fatigue duty, and kept there unexpectedly long: and there was a
+visible demoralization among the rest, especially from the fact that
+their pay had just been cut down, in violation of the express pledges
+of the government. A few weeks of steady sway made all right again;
+and during those weeks I felt a perfect exhilaration of health,
+followed by a month or two of complete prostration, when the work was
+done. This passing, I returned to duty, buoyed up by the fallacious
+hope that the winter months would set me right again.
+
+We had a new camp on Port Royal Island, very pleasantly situated, just
+out of Beaufort. It stretched nearly to the edge of a shelving bluff,
+fringed with pines and overlooking the river; below the bluff was a
+hard, narrow beach, where one might gallop a mile and bathe at the
+farther end. We could look up and down the curving stream, and watch the
+few vessels that came and went. Our first encampment had been lower down
+that same river, and we felt at home.
+
+The new camp was named Camp Shaw, in honor of the noble young officer
+who had lately fallen at Fort Wagner, under circumstances which had
+endeared him to all the men. As it happened, they had never seen him,
+nor was my regiment ever placed within immediate reach of the
+Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts. This I always regretted, feeling very
+desirous to compare the military qualities of the Northern and Southern
+blacks. As it was, the Southern regiments with which the Massachusetts
+troops were brigaded were hardly a fair specimen of their kind, having
+been raised chiefly by drafting, and, for this and other causes, being
+afflicted with perpetual discontent and desertion.
+
+We had, of course, looked forward with great interest to the arrival of
+these new colored regiments, and I had ridden in from the picket-station
+to see the Fifty-Fourth. Apart from the peculiarity of its material, it
+was fresh from my own State, and I had relatives and acquaintances among
+its officers. Governor Andrew, who had formed it, was an old friend, and
+had begged me, on departure from Massachusetts, to keep him informed as
+to our experiment I had good reason to believe that my reports had
+helped to prepare the way for this new battalion, and I had sent him, at
+his request, some hints as to its formation.*
+
+*COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS, Executive Department,
+
+Boston, February 5, 1863.
+
+To COL. T. W. HIGGINSON,
+Commanding 1st Regt. S. C. Vols.,
+
+Port Royal Id., S. C.
+
+COLONEL,--I am under obligations to you for your very interesting
+letter of January 19th, which I considered to be too important in its
+testimony to the efficiency of colored troops to be allowed to remain
+hidden on my files. I therefore placed some portions of it in the
+hands of Hon. Stephen M. Weld, of Jamaica Plain, for publication, and
+you will find enclosed the newspaper slip from the "Journal" of
+February 3d, in which it appeared. During a recent visit at Washington
+I have obtained permission from the Department of War to enlist
+colored troops as part of the Massachusetts quota, and I am about to
+begin to organize a colored infantry regiment, to be numbered the
+"54th Massachusetts Volunteers."
+
+I shall be greatly obliged by any suggestions which your experience may
+afford concerning it, and I am determined that it shall serve as a
+model, in the high character of its officers and the thorough discipline
+of its men, for all subsequent corps of the like material.
+
+Please present to General Saxton the assurances of my respectful regard.
+
+I have the honor to be, respectfuly and obediently yours,
+
+JOHN A. ANDREW, Governor of Massachusetts.
+
+
+In the streets of Beaufort I had met Colonel Shaw, riding with his
+lieutenant-colonel and successor, Edward Hallowell, and had gone back
+with them to share their first meal in camp. I should have known Shaw
+anywhere by his resemblance to his kindred, nor did it take long to
+perceive that he shared their habitual truthfulness and courage.
+Moreover, he and Hallowell had already got beyond the commonplaces of
+inexperience, in regard to colored troops, and, for a wonder, asked only
+sensible questions. For instance, he admitted the mere matter of courage
+to be settled, as regarded the colored troops, and his whole solicitude
+bore on this point, Would they do as well in line-of-battle as they had
+already done in more irregular service, and on picket and guard duty? Of
+this I had, of course, no doubt, nor, I think, had he; though I remember
+his saying something about the possibility of putting them between two
+fires in case of need, and so cutting off their retreat. I should never
+have thought of such a project, but I could not have expected bun to
+trust them as I did, until he had been actually under fire with them.
+That, doubtless, removed all his anxieties, if he really had any.
+
+This interview had occurred on the 4th of June. Shaw and his regiment
+had very soon been ordered to Georgia, then to Morris Island; Fort
+Wagner had been assaulted, and he had been killed. Most of the men
+knew about the circumstances of his death, and many of them had
+subscribed towards a monument for him,--a project which originated
+with General Saxton, and which was finally embodied in the "Shaw
+School-house" at Charleston. So it gave us all pleasure to name this
+camp for him, as its predecessor had been named for General Saxton.
+
+The new camp was soon brought into good order. The men had great
+ingenuity in building screens and shelters of light poles, filled in
+with the gray moss from the live-oaks. The officers had vestibules built
+in this way, before all their tents; the cooking-places were walled
+round in the same fashion; and some of the wide company-streets had
+sheltered sidewalks down the whole line of tents. The sergeant on duty
+at the entrance of the camp had a similar bower, and the architecture
+culminated in a "Praise-House" for school and prayer-meetings, some
+thirty feet in diameter. As for chimneys and flooring, they were
+provided with that magic and invisible facility which marks the second
+year of a regiment's life.
+
+That officer is happy who, besides a constitutional love of adventure,
+has also a love for the details of camp life, and likes to bring them to
+perfection. Nothing but a hen with her chickens about her can symbolize
+the content I felt on getting my scattered companies together, after
+some temporary separation on picket or fatigue duty. Then we went to
+work upon the nest. The only way to keep a camp in order is to set about
+everything as if you expected to stay there forever; if you stay, you
+get the comfort of it; if ordered away in twenty-four hours, you forget
+all wasted labor in the excitement of departure. Thus viewed, a camp is
+a sort of model farm or bit of landscape gardening; there is always some
+small improvement to be made, a trench, a well, more shade against the
+sun, an increased vigilance in sweeping. Then it is pleasant to take
+care of the men, to see them happy, to hear them purr.
+
+Then the duties of inspection and drill, suspended during active
+service, resume their importance with a month or two of quiet. It
+really costs unceasing labor to keep a regiment in perfect condition
+and ready for service. The work is made up of minute and endless
+details, like a bird's pruning her feathers or a cat's licking her
+kittens into their proper toilet. Here are eight hundred men, every
+one of whom, every Sunday morning at farthest, must be perfectly
+_soigne_ in all personal proprieties; he must exhibit himself provided
+with every article of clothing, buttons, shoe-strings, hooks and eyes,
+company letter, regimental number, rifle, bayonet, bayonet-scabbard,
+cap-pouch, cartridge-box, cartridge-box belt, cartridge-box
+belt-plate, gun-sling, canteen, haversack, knapsack, packed according
+to rule, forty cartridges, forty percussion caps; and every one of
+these articles polished to the highest brightness or blackness as the
+case may be, and moreover hung or slung or tied or carried in
+precisely the correct manner.
+
+What a vast and formidable housekeeping is here, my patriotic sisters!
+Consider, too, that every corner of the camp is to be kept absolutely
+clean and ready for exhibition at the shortest notice; hospital,
+stables, guard-house, cook-houses, company tents, must all be brought to
+perfection, and every square inch of this "farm of four acres" must look
+as smooth as an English lawn, twice a day. All this, beside the
+discipline and the drill and the regimental and company books, which
+must keep rigid account of all these details; consider all this, and
+then wonder no more that officers and men rejoice in being ordered on
+active service, where a few strokes of the pen will dispose of all this
+multiplicity of trappings as "expended in action" or "lost in service."
+
+For one, the longer I remained in service, the better I appreciated the
+good sense of most of the regular army niceties. True, these things must
+all vanish when the time of action comes, but it is these things that
+have prepared you for action. Of course, if you dwell on them only,
+military life becomes millinery life alone. Kinglake says that the
+Russian Grand-Duke Constantine, contemplating his beautiful
+toy-regiments, said that he dreaded war, for he knew that it would spoil
+the troops. The simple fact is, that a soldier is like the weapon he
+carries; service implies soiling, but you must have it clean in advance,
+that when soiled it may be of some use.
+
+The men had that year a Christmas present which they enjoyed to the
+utmost,--furnishing the detail, every other day, for provost-guard
+duty in Beaufort. It was the only military service which they had ever
+shared within the town, and it moreover gave a sense of self-respect
+to be keeping the peace of their own streets. I enjoyed seeing them
+put on duty those mornings; there was such a twinkle of delight in
+their eyes, though their features were immovable. As the "reliefs"
+went round, posting the guard, under charge of a corporal, one could
+watch the black sentinels successively dropped and the whites picked
+up,--gradually changing the complexion, like Lord Somebody's black
+stockings which became white stockings,--till at last there was only a
+squad of white soldiers obeying the "Support Arms! Forward, March!" of
+a black corporal.
+
+Then, when once posted, they glorified their office, you may be sure.
+Discipline had grown rather free-and-easy in the town about that time,
+and it is said that the guard-house never was so full within human
+memory as after their first tour of duty. I remember hearing that one
+young reprobate, son of a leading Northern philanthropist in those
+parts, was much aggrieved at being taken to the lock-up merely because
+he was found drunk in the streets. "Why," said he, "the white corporals
+always showed me the way home." And I can testify that, after an evening
+party, some weeks later, I beard with pleasure the officers asking
+eagerly for the countersign. "Who has the countersign?" said they. "The
+darkeys are on guard to-night, and we must look out for our lives." Even
+after a Christmas party at General Saxton's, the guard at the door very
+properly refused to let the ambulance be brought round from the stable
+for the ladies because the driver had not the countersign.
+
+One of the sergeants of the guard, on one of these occasions, made to
+one who questioned his authority an answer that could hardly have been
+improved. The questioner had just been arrested for some offence.
+
+"Know what dat mean?" said the indignant sergeant, pointing to the
+chevrons on his own sleeve. "Dat mean _Guv'ment_." Volumes could not
+have said more, and the victim collapsed. The thing soon settled
+itself, and nobody remembered to notice whether the face beside the
+musket of a sentinel were white or black. It meant Government, all the
+same.
+
+The men were also indulged with several raids on the mainland, under the
+direction of Captain J. E. Bryant, of the Eighth Maine, the most
+experienced scout in that region, who was endeavoring to raise by
+enlistment a regiment of colored troops. On one occasion Captains
+Whitney and Heasley, with their companies, penetrated nearly to
+Pocataligo, capturing some pickets and bringing away all the slaves of a
+plantation,--the latter operation being entirely under the charge of
+Sergeant Harry Williams (Co. K), without the presence of any white man.
+The whole command was attacked on the return by a rebel force, which
+turned out to be what was called in those regions a "dog-company,"
+consisting of mounted riflemen with half a dozen trained bloodhounds.
+The men met these dogs with their bayonets, killed four or five of their
+old tormentors with great relish, and brought away the carcass of one. I
+had the creature skinned, and sent the skin to New York to be stuffed
+and mounted, meaning to exhibit it at the Sanitary Commission Fair hi
+Boston; but it spoiled on the passage. These quadruped allies were not
+originally intended as "dogs of war," but simply to detect fugitive
+slaves, and the men were delighted at this confirmation of their tales
+of dog-companies, which some of the officers had always disbelieved.
+
+Captain Bryant, during his scouting adventures, had learned to outwit
+these bloodhounds, and used his skill in eluding escape, during
+another expedition of the same kind. He was sent with Captain
+Metcalf's company far up the Combahee River to cut the telegraphic
+wires and intercept despatches. Our adventurous chaplain and a
+telegraphic operator went with the party. They ascended the river, cut
+the wires, and read the despatches for an hour or two. Unfortunately,
+the attached wire was too conspicuously hung, and was seen by a
+passenger on the railway train in passing. The train was stopped and a
+swift stampede followed; a squad of cavalry was sent in pursuit, and
+our chaplain, with Lieutenant Osborn, of Bryant's projected regiment,
+were captured; also one private,--the first of our men who had ever
+been taken prisoners. In spite of an agreement at Washington to the
+contrary, our chaplain was held as prisoner of war, the only spiritual
+adviser in uniform, so far as I know, who had that honor. I do not
+know but his reverence would have agreed with Scott's
+pirate-lieutenant, that it was better to live as plain Jack Bunce than
+die as Frederick Altamont; but I am very sure that he would rather
+have been kept prisoner to the close of the war, as a combatant, than
+have been released on parole as a non-resistant.
+
+After his return, I remember, he gave the most animated accounts of the
+whole adventure, of which he had enjoyed every instant, from the first
+entrance on the enemy's soil to the final capture. I suppose we should
+all like to tap the telegraphic wires anywhere and read our neighbor's
+messages, if we could only throw round this process the dignity of a
+Sacred Cause. This was what our good chaplain had done, with the same
+conscientious zest with which he had conducted his Sunday foraging in
+Florida. But he told me that nothing so impressed him on the whole trip
+as the sudden transformation in the black soldier who was taken prisoner
+with him. The chaplain at once adopted the policy, natural to him, of
+talking boldly and even defiantly to his captors, and commanding instead
+of beseeching. He pursued the same policy always and gained by it, he
+thought. But the negro adopted the diametrically opposite policy, also
+congenial to his crushed race,--all the force seemed to go out of him,
+and he surrendered himself like a tortoise to be kicked and trodden upon
+at their will. This manly, well-trained soldier at once became a slave
+again, asked no questions, and, if any were asked, made meek and
+conciliatory answers. He did not know, nor did any of us know, whether
+he would be treated as a prisoner of war, or shot, or sent to a
+rice-plantation. He simply acted according to the traditions of his
+race, as did the chaplain on his side. In the end the soldier's cunning
+was vindicated by the result; he escaped, and rejoined us in six months,
+while the chaplain was imprisoned for a year.
+
+The men came back very much exhausted from this expedition, and those
+who were in the chaplain's squad narrowly escaped with their lives.
+One brave fellow had actually not a morsel to eat for four days, and
+then could keep nothing on his stomach for two days more, so that his
+life was despaired of; and yet he brought all his equipments safe into
+camp. Some of these men had led such wandering lives, in woods and
+swamps, that to hunt them was like hunting an otter; shyness and
+concealment had grown to be their second nature.
+
+After these little episodes came two months of peace. We were clean,
+comfortable, quiet, and consequently discontented. It was therefore with
+eagerness that we listened to a rumor of a new Florida expedition, in
+which we might possibly take a hand.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 11
+Florida Again?
+
+
+Let me revert once more to my diary, for a specimen of the sharp changes
+and sudden disappointments that may come to troops in service. But for a
+case or two of varioloid in the regiment, we should have taken part in
+the battle of Olustee, and should have had (as was reported) the right
+of the line. At any rate we should have shared the hard knocks and the
+glory, which were distributed pretty freely to the colored troops then
+and there. The diary will give, better than can any continuous
+narrative, our ups and down of expectation in those days.
+
+"CAMP SHAW, BEAUFORT, S. C.,
+
+February 7, 1864.
+
+"Great are the uncertainties of military orders! Since our recall from
+Jacksonville we have had no such surprises as came to us on Wednesday
+night. It was our third day of a new tour of duty at the picket
+station. We had just got nicely settled,--men well tented, with good
+floors, and in high spirits, officers at out-stations all happy, Mrs.
+---- coming to stay with her husband, we at head-quarters just in
+order, house cleaned, moss-garlands up, camellias and jessamines in
+the tin wash-basins, baby in bliss;--our usual run of visitors had
+just set in, two Beaufort captains and a surgeon had just risen from a
+late dinner after a flag of truce, General Saxton and his wife had
+driven away but an hour or two before, we were all sitting about busy,
+with a great fire blazing, Mrs. D. had just remarked triumphantly,
+'Last time I had but a mouthful here, and now I shall be here three
+weeks'--when--
+
+"In dropped, like a bombshell, a despatch announcing that we were to be
+relieved by the Eighth Maine, the next morning, as General Gillmore had
+sent an order that we should be ready for departure from Beaufort at any
+moment.
+
+"Conjectures, orders, packing, sending couriers to out-stations, were
+the employments of the evening; the men received the news with cheers,
+and we all came in next morning."
+
+"February 11, 1864.
+
+"For three days we have watched the river, and every little steamboat
+that comes up for coal brings out spy-glasses and conjectures, and
+'Dar's de Fourf New Hampshire,'--for when that comes, it is said, we go.
+Meanwhile we hear stirring news from Florida, and the men are very
+impatient to be off. It is remarkable how much more thoroughly they look
+at things as soldiers than last year, and how much less as home-bound
+men,--the South-Carolinians, I mean, for of course the Floridians would
+naturally wish to go to Florida.
+
+"But in every way I see the gradual change in them, sometimes with a
+sigh, as parents watch their children growing up and miss the droll
+speeches and the confiding ignorance of childhood. Sometimes it comes
+over me with a pang that they are growing more like white men,--less
+naive and less grotesque. Still, I think there is enough of it to last,
+and that their joyous buoyancy, at least, will hold out while life does.
+
+"As for our destination, our greatest fear is of finding ourselves
+posted at Hilton Head and going no farther. As a dashing Irish officer
+remarked the other day, 'If we are ordered away anywhere, I hope it will
+be either to go to Florida or else stay here!'"
+
+"Sublime uncertainties again!
+
+"After being ordered in from picket, under marching orders; after the
+subsequent ten days of uncertainty; after watching every steamboat that
+came up the river, to see if the Fourth New Hampshire was on board,--at
+last the regiment came.
+
+"Then followed another break; there was no transportation to take us. At
+last a boat was notified.
+
+"Then General Saxton, as anxious to keep us as was the regiment to go,
+played his last card in small-pox, telegraphing to department
+head-quarters that we had it dangerously in the regiment. (N. B. All
+varioloid, light at that, and besides, we always have it.)
+
+"Then the order came to leave behind the sick and those who had been
+peculiarly exposed, and embark the rest next day.
+
+"Great was the jubilee! The men were up, I verily believe, by three in
+the morning, and by eight the whole camp was demolished or put in
+wagons, and we were on our way. The soldiers of the Fourth New Hampshire
+swarmed in; every board was swept away by them; there had been a time
+when colored boards (if I may delicately so express myself) were
+repudiated by white soldiers, but that epoch had long since passed. I
+gave my new tent-frame, even the latch, to Colonel Bell; ditto
+Lieutenant-Colonel to Lieutenant-Colonel.
+
+"Down we marched, the men singing 'John Brown' and 'Marching Along'
+and 'Gwine in de Wilderness'; women in tears and smiles lined the way.
+We halted opposite the dear General's; we cheered, he speeched, I
+speeched, we all embraced symbolically, and cheered some more. Then we
+went to work at the wharf; vast wagon-loads of tents, rations,
+ordnance, and what-not disappeared in the capacious maw of the
+Delaware. In the midst of it all came riding down General Saxton with
+a despatch from Hilton Head:--
+
+"'If you think the amount of small-pox in the First South Carolina
+Volunteers sufficient, the order will be countermanded.'
+
+"'What shall I say?' quoth the guilty General, perceiving how
+preposterously too late the negotiation was reopened.
+
+"'Say, sir?' quoth I. 'Say that we are on board already and the
+small-pox left behind. Say we had only thirteen cases, chiefly
+varioloid, and ten almost well.'
+
+"Our blood was up with a tremendous morning's work done, and, rather
+than turn back, we felt ready to hold down Major-General Gillmore,
+commanding department, and all his staff upon the wharf, and vaccinate
+them by main force.
+
+"So General Saxton rode away, and we worked away. Just as the last
+wagon-load but one was being transferred to the omnivorous depths of the
+Delaware,--which I should think would have been filled ten times over
+with what we had put into it,--down rode the General with a fiendish joy
+in his bright eyes and held out a paper,--one of the familiar rescripts
+from headquarters.
+
+"'The marching orders of the First South Carolina Volunteers are hereby
+countermanded.'
+
+"'Major Trowbridge,' said I, 'will you give my compliments to
+Lieutenant Hooper, somewhere in the hold of that steamer, and direct him
+to set his men at work to bring out every individual article which they
+have carried hi.' And I sat down on a pile of boards.
+
+"'You will return to your old camping-ground, Colonel,' said the
+General, placidly. 'Now,' he added with serene satisfaction, 'we will
+have some brigade drills!'
+
+"Brigade drills! Since Mr. Pickwick, with his heartless tomato-sauce and
+warming-pans, there had been nothing so aggravating as to try to solace
+us, who were as good as on board ship and under way,--nay, in imagination
+as far up the St. John's as Pilatka at least,--with brigade drills! It
+was very kind and flattering in him to wish to keep us. But unhappily we
+had made up our minds to go.
+
+"Never did officer ride at the head of a battalion of more wobegone,
+spiritless wretches than I led back from Beaufort that day. 'When I
+march down to de landin',' said one of the men afterwards, 'my knapsack
+full of feathers. Comin' back, _he lead_!' And the lead, instead of the
+feathers, rested on the heart of every one.
+
+"As if the disappointment itself were not sufficient, we had to return
+to our pretty camp, accustomed to its drawing-room order, and find it a
+desert. Every board gone from the floors, the screens torn down from the
+poles, all the little conveniences scattered, and, to crown all, a cold
+breeze such as we had not known since New-Year's Day blowing across the
+camp and flooding everything with dust. I sincerely hope the regiment
+would never behave after a defeat as they behaved then. Every man seemed
+crushed, officers and soldiers alike; when they broke ranks, they went
+and lay down like sheep where their tents used to be, or wandered
+disconsolately about, looking for their stray belongings. The scene was
+so infinitely dolorous that it gradually put me in the highest spirits;
+the ludicrousness of the whole affair was so complete, there was nothing
+to do but laugh. The horrible dust blew till every officer had some
+black spot on his nose which paralyzed pathos. Of course the only way
+was to set them all at work as soon as possible; and work them we did,--I
+at the camp and the Major at the wharf,--loading and unloading wagons and
+just reversing all which the morning had done.
+
+"The New Hampshire men were very considerate, and gave back most of what
+they had taken, though many of our men were really too delicate or proud
+to ask or even take what they had once given to soldiers or to the
+colored people. I had no such delicacy about my tent-frame, and by night
+things had resumed something of their old aspect, and cheerfulness was
+in part restored. Yet long after this I found one first sergeant
+absolutely in tears,--a Florida man, most of whose kindred were up the
+St. John's. It was very natural that the men from that region should
+feel thus bitterly, but it shows how much of the habit of soldiers they
+have all acquired, that the South Carolina men, who were leaving the
+neighborhood of their families for an indefinite time, were just as
+eager to go, and not one deserted, though they knew it for a week
+beforehand. No doubt my precarious health makes it now easier for me
+personally to remain here--easier on reflection at least--than for the
+others. At the same time Florida is fascinating, and offers not only
+adventure, but the command of a brigade. Certainly at the last moment there
+was not a sacrifice I would not have made rather than wrench myself and
+others away from the expedition. We are, of course, thrown back into the
+old uncertainty, and if the small-pox subsides (and it is really
+diminishing decidedly) we may yet come in at the wrong end of the
+Florida affair."
+
+"February 19.
+
+"Not a bit of it! This morning the General has ridden up radiant, has
+seen General Gillmore, who has decided not to order us to Florida at
+all, nor withdraw any of this garrison. Moreover, he says that all which
+is intended in Florida is done,--that there will be no advance to
+Tallahassee, and General Seymour will establish a camp of instruction in
+Jacksonville. Well, if that is all, it is a lucky escape."
+
+We little dreamed that on that very day the march toward Olustee was
+beginning. The battle took place next day, and I add one more extract to
+show how the news reached Beaufort.
+
+"February 23, 1864.
+
+"There was the sound of revelry by night at a ball in Beaufort last
+night, in a new large building beautifully decorated. All the collected
+flags of the garrison hung round and over us, as if the stars and
+stripes were devised for an ornament alone. The array of uniforms was
+such that a civilian became a distinguished object, much more a lady.
+All would have gone according to the proverbial marriage-bell, I
+suppose, had there not been a slight palpable shadow over all of us from
+hearing vague stories of a lost battle in Florida, and from the thought
+that perhaps the very ambulances in which we rode to the ball were ours
+only until the wounded or the dead might tenant them.
+
+"General Gillmore only came, I supposed, to put a good face upon the
+matter. He went away soon, and General Saxton went; then came a rumor
+that the Cosmopolitan had actually arrived with wounded, but still the
+dance went on. There was nothing unfeeling about it,--one gets used to
+things,--when suddenly, in the midst of the 'Lancers,' there came a
+perfect hush, the music ceasing, a few surgeons went hastily to and
+fro, as if conscience-stricken (I should think they might have
+been),--then there 'waved a mighty shadow in,' as in Uhland's 'Black
+Knight,' and as we all stood wondering we were 'ware of General
+Saxton, who strode hastily down the hall, his pale face very resolute,
+and looking almost sick with anxiety. He had just been on board the
+steamer; there were two hundred and fifty wounded men just arrived,
+and the ball must end. Not that there was anything for us to do; but
+the revel was mistimed, and must be ended; it was wicked to be
+dancing, with such a scene of suffering near by.
+
+"Of course the ball was instantly broken up, though with some murrmurings
+and some longings of appetite, on the part of some, toward the wasted
+supper.
+
+"Later, I went on board the boat. Among the long lines of wounded, black
+and white intermingled, there was the wonderful quiet which usually
+prevails on such occasions. Not a sob nor a groan, except from those
+undergoing removal. It is not self-control, but chiefly the shock to the
+system produced by severe wounds, especially gunshot wounds, and which
+usually keeps the patient stiller at first than any later time.
+
+"A company from my regiment waited on the wharf, in their accustomed
+dusky silence, and I longed to ask them what they thought of our Florida
+disappointment now? In view of what they saw, did they still wish we had
+been there? I confess that in presence of all that human suffering, I
+could not wish it. But I would not have suggested any such thought to them.
+
+"I found our kind-hearted ladies, Mrs. Chamberlin and Mrs. Dewhurst, on
+board the steamer, but there was nothing for them to do, and we walked
+back to camp in the radiant moonlight; Mrs. Chamberlin more than ever
+strengthened in her blushing woman's philosophy, 'I don't care who wins
+the laurels, provided we don't!' "
+
+"February 29.
+
+"But for a few trivial cases of varioloid, we should
+certainly have been in that disastrous fight. We were confidently
+expected for several days at Jacksonville, and the commanding general
+told Colonel Hallowell that we, being the oldest colored regiment,
+would have the right of the line. This was certainly to miss danger
+and glory very closely."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 12
+The Negro as a Soldier
+
+
+There was in our regiment a very young recruit, named Sam Roberts, of
+whom Trowbridge used to tell this story. Early in the war Trowbridge had
+been once sent to Amelia Island with a squad of men, under direction of
+Commodore Goldsborough, to remove the negroes from the island. As the
+officers stood on the beach, talking to some of the older freedmen, they
+saw this urchin peeping at them from front and rear in a scrutinizing
+way, for which his father at last called him to account, as thus:--
+
+"Hi! Sammy, what you's doin', chile?"
+
+"Daddy," said the inquisitive youth, "don't you know mas'r tell us
+Yankee hab tail? I don't see no tail, daddy!"
+
+There were many who went to Port Royal during the war, in civil or
+military positions, whose previous impressions of the colored race
+were about as intelligent as Sam's view of themselves. But, for once,
+I had always had so much to do with fugitive slaves, and had studied
+the whole subject with such interest, that I found not much to learn
+or unlearn as to this one point. Their courage I had before seen
+tested; their docile and lovable qualities I had known; and the only
+real surprise that experience brought me was in finding them so little
+demoralized. I had not allowed for the extreme remoteness and
+seclusion of their lives, especially among the Sea Islands. Many of
+them had literally spent their whole existence on some lonely island
+or remote plantation, where the master never came, and the overseer
+only once or twice a week. With these exceptions, such persons had
+never seen a white face, and of the excitements or sins of larger
+communities they had not a conception. My friend Colonel Hallo-well,
+of the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts, told me that he had among his men
+some of the worst reprobates of Northern cities. While I had some men
+who were unprincipled and troublesome, there was not one whom I could
+call a hardened villain. I was constantly expecting to find male
+Topsies, with no notions of good and plenty of evil. But I never found
+one. Among the most ignorant there was very often a childlike absence
+of vices, which was rather to be classed as inexperience than as
+innocence, but which had some of the advantages of both.
+
+Apart from this, they were very much like other men. General Saxton,
+examining with some impatience a long list of questions from some
+philanthropic Commission at the North, respecting the traits and habits
+of the freedmen, bade some staff-officer answer them all in two
+words,--"Intensely human." We all admitted that it was a striking and
+comprehensive description.
+
+For instance, as to courage. So far as I have seen, the mass of men
+are naturally courageous up to a certain point. A man seldom runs away
+from danger which he ought to face, unless others run; each is apt to
+keep with the mass, and colored soldiers have more than usual of this
+gregariousness. In almost every regiment, black or white, there are a
+score or two of men who are naturally daring, who really hunger after
+dangerous adventures, and are happiest when allowed to seek them.
+Every commander gradually finds out who these men are, and habitually
+uses them; certainly I had such, and I remember with delight their
+bearing, their coolness, and their dash. Some of them were negroes,
+some mulattoes. One of them would have passed for white, with brown
+hair and blue eyes, while others were so black you could hardly see
+their features. These picked men varied in other respects too; some
+were neat and well-drilled soldiers, while others were slovenly,
+heedless fellows,--the despair of their officers at inspection, their
+pride on a raid. They were the natural scouts and rangers of the
+regiment; they had the two-o'clock-in-the-morning courage, which
+Napoleon thought so rare. The mass of the regiment rose to the same
+level under excitement, and were more excitable, I think, than whites,
+but neither more nor less courageous.
+
+Perhaps the best proof of a good average of courage among them was in
+the readiness they always showed for any special enterprise. I do not
+remember ever to have had the slightest difficulty in obtaining
+volunteers, but rather in keeping down the number. The previous pages
+include many illustrations of this, as well as of then: endurance of
+pain and discomfort. For instance, one of my lieutenants, a very daring
+Irishman, who had served for eight years as a sergeant of regular
+artillery in Texas, Utah, and South Carolina, said he had never been
+engaged in anything so risky as our raid up the St. Mary's. But in truth
+it seems to me a mere absurdity to deliberately argue the question of
+courage, as applied to men among whom I waked and slept, day and night,
+for so many months together. As well might he who has been wandering for
+years upon the desert, with a Bedouin escort, discuss the courage of the
+men whose tents have been his shelter and whose spears his guard. We,
+their officers, did not go there to teach lessons, but to receive them.
+There were more than a hundred men in the ranks who had voluntarily met
+more dangers in then" escape from slavery than any of my young captains
+had incurred in all their lives.
+
+There was a family named Wilson, I remember, of which we had several
+representatives. Three or four brothers had planned an escape from the
+interior to our lines; they finally decided that the youngest should
+stay and take care of the old mother; the rest, with their sister and
+her children, came in a "dug-out" down one of the rivers. They were
+fired upon, again and again, by the pickets along the banks, until
+finally every man on board was wounded; and still they got safely
+through. When the bullets began to fly about them, the woman shed
+tears, and her little girl of nine said to her, "Don't cry, mother,
+Jesus will help you," and then the child began praying as the wounded
+men still urged the boat along. This the mother told me, but I had
+previously heard it from on officer who was on the gunboat that picked
+them up,--a big, rough man, whose voice fairly broke as he described
+their appearance. He said that the mother and child had been hid for
+nine months in the woods before attempting their escape, and the child
+would speak to no one,--indeed, she hardly would when she came to our
+camp. She was almost white, and this officer wished to adopt her, but
+the mother said, "I would do anything but that for _oonah_," this
+being a sort of Indian formation of the second-person-plural, such as
+they sometimes use. This same officer afterwards saw a reward offered
+for this family in a Savannah paper.
+
+I used to think that I should not care to read "Uncle Tom's Cabin" hi
+our camp; it would have seemed tame. Any group of men in a tent would
+have had more exciting tales to tell. I needed no fiction when I had
+Fanny Wright, for instance, daily passing to and fro before my tent,
+with her shy little girl clinging to her skirts. Fanny was a modest
+little mulatto woman, a soldier's wife, and a company laundress. She had
+escaped from the main-land in a boat, with that child and another. Her
+baby was shot dead in her arms, and she reached our lines with one child
+safe on earth and the other in heaven. I never found it needful to give
+any elementary instructions in courage to Fanny's husband, you may be sure.
+
+There was another family of brothers in the regiment named Miller. Their
+grandmother, a fine-looking old woman, nearly seventy, I should think,
+but erect as a pine-tree, used sometimes to come and visit them. She and
+her husband had once tried to escape from a plantation near Savannah.
+They had failed, and had been brought back; the husband had received
+five hundred lashes, and while the white men on the plantation were
+viewing the punishment, she was collecting her children and
+grandchildren, to the number of twenty-two, in a neighboring marsh,
+preparatory to another attempt that night. They found a flat-boat which
+had been rejected as unseaworthy, got on board,--still under the old
+woman's orders,--and drifted forty miles down the river to our lines.
+Trowbridge happened to be on board the gunboat which picked them up, and
+he said that when the "flat" touched the side of the vessel, the
+grandmother rose to her full height, with her youngest grandchild in her
+arms, and said only, "My God! are we free?" By one of those coincidences
+of which life is full, her husband escaped also, after his punishment,
+and was taken up by the same gunboat.
+
+I hardly need point out that my young lieutenants did not have to teach
+the principles of courage to this woman's grandchildren.
+
+I often asked myself why it was that, with this capacity of daring and
+endurance, they had not kept the land in a perpetual flame of
+insurrection; why, especially since the opening of the war, they had
+kept so still. The answer was to be found in the peculiar temperament of
+the races, in their religious faith, and in the habit of patience that
+centuries had fortified. The shrewder men all said substantially the
+same thing. What was the use of insurrection, where everything was
+against them? They had no knowledge, no money, no arms, no drill, no
+organization,--above all, no mutual confidence. It was the tradition
+among them that all insurrections were always betrayed by somebody. They
+had no mountain passes to defend like the Maroons of Jamaica,--no
+unpenetrable swamps, like the Maroons of Surinam. Where they had these,
+even on a small scale, they had used them,--as in certain swamps round
+Savannah and in the everglades of Florida, where they united with the
+Indians, and would stand fire--so I was told by General Saxton, who had
+fought them there--when the Indians would retreat.
+
+It always seemed to me that, had I been a slave, my life would have been
+one long scheme of insurrection. But I learned to respect the patient
+self-control of those who had waited till the course of events should
+open a better way. When it came they accepted it. Insurrection on their
+part would at once have divided the Northern sentiment; and a large part
+of our army would have joined with the Southern army to hunt them down.
+By their waiting till we needed them, their freedom was secured.
+
+Two things chiefly surprised me in their feeling toward their former
+masters,--the absence of affection and the absence of revenge. I
+expected to find a good deal of the patriarchal feeling. It always
+seemed to me a very ill-applied emotion, as connected with the facts
+and laws of American slavery,--still I expected to find it. I suppose
+that my men and their families and visitors may have had as much of it
+as the mass of freed slaves; but certainly they had not a particle. I
+never could cajole one of them, in his most discontented moment, into
+regretting "ole mas'r time" for a single instant. I never heard one
+speak of the masters except as natural enemies. Yet they were
+perfectly discriminating as to individuals; many of them claimed to
+have had kind owners, and some expressed great gratitude to them for
+particular favors received. It was not the individuals, but the
+ownership, of which they complained. That they saw to be a wrong which
+no special kindnesses could right. On this, as on all points connected
+with slavery, they understood the matter as clearly as Garrison or
+Phillips; the wisest philosophy could teach them nothing as to that,
+nor could any false philosophy befog them. After all, personal
+experience is the best logician.
+
+Certainly this indifference did not proceed from any want of personal
+affection, for they were the most affectionate people among whom I had
+ever lived. They attached themselves to every officer who deserved love,
+and to some who did not; and if they failed to show it to their masters,
+it proved the wrongfulness of the mastery. On the other hand, they
+rarely showed one gleam of revenge, and I shall never forget the
+self-control with which one of our best sergeants pointed out to me, at
+Jacksonville, the very place where one of his brothers had been hanged
+by the whites for leading a party of fugitive slaves. He spoke of it as
+a historic matter, without any bearing on the present issue.
+
+But side by side with this faculty of patience, there was a certain
+tropical element in the men, a sort of fiery ecstasy when aroused,
+which seemed to link them by blood with the French Turcos, and made
+them really resemble their natural enemies, the Celts, far more than
+the Anglo-Saxon temperament. To balance this there were great
+individual resources when alone,--a sort of Indian wiliness and
+subtlety of resource. Their gregariousness and love of drill made them
+more easy to keep in hand than white American troops, who rather like
+to straggle or go in little squads, looking out for themselves,
+without being bothered with officers. The blacks prefer organization.
+
+The point of inferiority that I always feared, though I never had
+occasion to prove it, was that they might show less fibre, less tough
+and dogged resistance, than whites, during a prolonged trial,--a long,
+disastrous march, for instance, or the hopeless defence of a besieged
+town. I should not be afraid of their mutinying or running away, but of
+their drooping and dying. It might not turn out so; but I mention it for
+the sake of fairness, and to avoid overstating the merits of these
+troops. As to the simple general fact of courage and reliability I think
+no officer in our camp ever thought of there being any difference
+between black and white. And certainly the opinions of these officers,
+who for years risked their lives every moment on the fidelity of their
+men, were worth more than those of all the world beside.
+
+No doubt there were reasons why this particular war was an especially
+favorable test of the colored soldiers. They had more to fight for than
+the whites. Besides the flag and the Union, they had home and wife and
+child. They fought with ropes round their necks, and when orders were
+issued that the officers of colored troops should be put to death on
+capture, they took a grim satisfaction. It helped their _esprit de corps_
+immensely. With us, at least, there was to be no play-soldier. Though
+they had begun with a slight feeling of inferiority to the white troops,
+this compliment substituted a peculiar sense of self-respect. And even
+when the new colored regiments began to arrive from the North my men
+still pointed out this difference,--that in case of ultimate defeat, the
+Northern troops, black or white, would go home, while the First South
+Carolina must fight it out or be re-enslaved. This was one thing that
+made the St. John's River so attractive to them and even to me;--it was
+so much nearer the everglades. I used seriously to ponder, during the
+darker periods of the war, whether I might not end my days as an
+outlaw,--a leader of Maroons.
+
+Meanwhile, I used to try to make some capital for the Northern troops,
+in their estimate, by pointing out that it was a disinterested thing in
+these men from the free States, to come down there and fight, that the
+slaves might be free. But they were apt keenly to reply, that many of
+the white soldiers disavowed this object, and said that that was not the
+object of the war, nor even likely to be its end. Some of them even
+repeated Mr. Seward's unfortunate words to Mr. Adams, which some general
+had been heard to quote. So, on the whole, I took nothing by the motion,
+as was apt to be the case with those who spoke a good word for our
+Government, in those vacillating and half proslavery days.
+
+At any rate, this ungenerous discouragement had this good effect, that
+it touched their pride; they would deserve justice, even if they did not
+obtain it. This pride was afterwards severely tested during the
+disgraceful period when the party of repudiation in Congress temporarily
+deprived them of their promised pay. In my regiment the men never
+mutinied, nor even threatened mutiny; they seemed to make it a matter of
+honor to do then: part, even if the Government proved a defaulter; but
+one third of them, including the best men in the regiment, quietly
+refused to take a dollar's pay, at the reduced price. "We'se gib our
+sogerin' to de Guv'ment, Gunnel," they said, "but we won't 'spise
+ourselves so much for take de seben dollar." They even made a
+contemptuous ballad, of which I once caught a snatch.
+
+ "Ten dollar a month!
+ Tree ob dat for clothin'l
+ Go to Washington
+ Fight for Linkum's darter!"
+
+This "Lincoln's daughter" stood for the Goddess of Liberty, it would
+seem. They would be true to her, but they would not take the half-pay.
+This was contrary to my advice, and to that of other officers; but I now
+think it was wise. Nothing less than this would have called the
+attention of the American people to this outrageous fraud.*
+
+* See Appendix.
+
+The same slow forecast had often marked their action in other ways. One
+of our ablest sergeants, Henry Mclntyre, who had earned two dollars and
+a half per day as a master-carpenter in Florida, and paid one dollar and
+a half to his master, told me that he had deliberately refrained from
+learning to read, because that knowledge exposed the slaves to so much
+more watching and suspicion. This man and a few others had built on
+contract the greater part of the town of Micanopy in Florida, and was a
+thriving man when his accustomed discretion failed for once, and he lost
+all. He named his child William Lincoln, and it brought upon him such
+suspicion that he had to make his escape.
+
+I cannot conceive what people at the North mean by speaking of the
+negroes as a bestial or brutal race. Except in some insensibility to
+animal pain, I never knew of an act in my regiment which I should call
+brutal. In reading Kay's "Condition of the English Peasantry" I was
+constantly struck with the unlikeness of my men to those therein
+described. This could not proceed from my prejudices as an abolitionist,
+for they would have led me the other way, and indeed I had once written
+a little essay to show the brutalizing influences of slavery. I learned
+to think that we abolitionists had underrated the suffering produced by
+slavery among the negroes, but had overrated the demoralization. Or
+rather, we did not know how the religious temperament of the negroes had
+checked the demoralization. Yet again, it must be admitted that this
+temperament, born of sorrow and oppression, is far more marked in the
+slave than in the native African.
+
+Theorize as we may, there was certainly in our camp an average tone of
+propriety which all visitors noticed, and which was not created, but
+only preserved by discipline. I was always struck, not merely by the
+courtesy of the men, but also by a certain sober decency of language.
+If a man had to report to me any disagreeable fact, for instance, he
+was sure to do it with gravity and decorum, and not blurt it out in an
+offensive way. And it certainly was a significant fact that the ladies
+of our camp, when we were so fortunate as to have such guests, the
+young wives, especially, of the adjutant and quartermaster, used to go
+among the tents when the men were off duty, in order to hear their big
+pupils read and spell, without the slightest fear of annoyance. I do
+not mean direct annoyance or insult, for no man who valued his life
+would have ventured that in presence of the others, but I mean the
+annoyance of accidentally seeing or hearing improprieties not intended
+for them. They both declared that they would not have moved about with
+anything like the same freedom in any white camp they had ever
+entered, and it always roused their indignation to hear the negro race
+called brutal or depraved.
+
+This came partly from natural good manners, partly from the habit of
+deference, partly from ignorance of the refined and ingenious evil which
+is learned in large towns; but a large part came from their strongly
+religious temperament. Their comparative freedom from swearing, for
+instance,--an abstinence which I fear military life did not strengthen,--
+was partly a matter of principle. Once I heard one of them say to
+another, in a transport of indignation, "Ha-a-a, boy, s'pose I no be a
+Christian, I cuss you sol"--which was certainly drawing pretty hard upon
+the bridle. "Cuss," however, was a generic term for all manner of evil
+speaking; they would say, "He cuss me fool," or "He cuss me coward," as
+if the essence of propriety were in harsh and angry speech,--which I
+take to be good ethics. But certainly, if Uncle Toby could have
+recruited his army in Flanders from our ranks, their swearing would have
+ceased to be historic.
+
+It used to seem to me that never, since Cromwell's time, had there
+been soldiers in whom the religious element held such a place. "A
+religious army," "a gospel army," were their frequent phrases. In
+their prayer-meetings there was always a mingling, often quaint
+enough, of the warlike and the pious. "If each one of us was a praying
+man," said Corporal Thomas Long in a sermon, "it appears to me that we
+could fight as well with prayers as with bullets,--for the Lord has
+said that if you have faith even as a grain of mustard-seed cut into
+four parts, you can say to the sycamore-tree, Arise, and it will come
+up." And though Corporal Long may have got a little perplexed in his
+botany, his faith proved itself by works, for he volunteered and went
+many miles on a solitary scouting expedition into the enemy's country
+in Florida, and got back safe, after I had given him up for lost.
+
+The extremes of religious enthusiasm I did not venture to encourage, for
+I could not do it honestly; neither did I discourage them, but simply
+treated them with respect, and let them have their way, so long as they
+did not interfere with discipline. In general they promoted it. The
+mischievous little drummer-boys, whose scrapes and quarrels were the
+torment of my existence, might be seen kneeling together in their tents
+to say their prayers at night, and I could hope that their slumbers were
+blessed by some spirit of peace, such as certainly did not rule over
+their waking. The most reckless and daring fellows in the regiment were
+perfect fatalists in theur confidence that God would watch over them,
+and that if they died, it would be because theur time had come. This
+almost excessive faith, and the love of freedom and of their families,
+all co-operated with their pride as soldiers to make them do their duty.
+I could not have spared any of these incentives. Those of our officers
+who were personally the least influenced by such considerations, still
+saw the need of encouraging them among the men.
+
+I am bound to say that this strongly devotional turn was not always
+accompanied by the practical virtues; but neither was it strikingly
+divorced from them. A few men, I remember, who belonged to the ancient
+order of hypocrites, but not many. Old Jim Cushman was our favorite
+representative scamp. He used to vex his righteous soul over the
+admission of the unregenerate to prayer-meetings, and went off once
+shaking his head and muttering, "Too much goat shout wid de sheep." But
+he who objected to this profane admixture used to get our mess-funds far
+more hopelessly mixed with his own, when he went out to buy chickens.
+And I remember that, on being asked by our Major, in that semi-Ethiopian
+dialect into which we sometimes slid, "How much wife you got, Jim?" the
+veteran replied, with a sort of penitence for lost opportunities, "On'y
+but four, Sahl"
+
+Another man of somewhat similar quality went among us by the name of
+Henry Ward Beecher, from a remarkable resemblance in face and figure
+to that sturdy divine. I always felt a sort of admiration for this
+worthy, because of the thoroughness with which he outwitted me, and
+the sublime impudence in which he culminated. He got a series of
+passes from me, every week or two, to go and see his wife on a
+neighboring plantation, and finally, when this resource seemed
+exhausted, he came boldly for one more pass, that he might go and be
+married.
+
+We used to quote _him_ a good deal, also, as a sample of a certain
+Shakespearian boldness of personification in which the men sometimes
+indulged. Once, I remember, his captain had given him a fowling-piece to
+clean. Henry Ward had left it in the captain's tent, and the latter,
+finding it, had transferred the job to some one else.
+
+Then came a confession, in this precise form, with many dignified
+gesticulations:--
+
+"Cappen! I took dat gun, and I put bun in Cappen tent. Den I look, and
+de gun not dar! Den Conscience say, Cappen mus' hab gib dat gun to
+somebody else for clean. Den I say, Conscience, you reason correck."
+
+Compare Lancelot Gobbo's soliloquy in the "Two Gentlemen of Verona"!
+
+Still, I maintain that, as a whole, the men were remarkably free from
+inconvenient vices. There was no more lying and stealing than in average
+white regiments. The surgeon was not much troubled by shamming sickness,
+and there were not a great many complaints of theft. There was less
+quarrelling than among white soldiers, and scarcely ever an instance of
+drunkenness. Perhaps the influence of their officers had something to do
+with this; for not a ration of whiskey was ever issued to the men, nor
+did I ever touch it, while in the army, nor approve a requisition for
+any of the officers, without which it could not easily be obtained. In
+this respect our surgeons fortunately agreed with me, and we never had
+reason to regret it. I believe the use of ardent spirits to be as
+useless and injurious in the army as on board ship, and among the
+colored troops, especially, who had never been accustomed to it, I think
+that it did only harm.
+
+The point of greatest laxity in their moral habits--the want of a high
+standard of chastity--was not one which affected their camp life to
+any great extent, and it therefore came less under my observation. But
+I found to my relief that, whatever their deficiency in this respect,
+it was modified by the general quality of their temperament, and
+indicated rather a softening and relaxation than a hardening and
+brutalizing of their moral natures. Any insult or violence in this
+direction was a thing unknown. I never heard of an instance. It was
+not uncommon for men to have two or three wives in different
+plantations,--the second, or remoter, partner being called a "'broad
+wife,"--i.e. wife abroad. But the whole tendency was toward marriage,
+and this state of things was only regarded as a bequest from "mas'r
+time."
+
+I knew a great deal about their marriages, for they often consulted me,
+and took my counsel as lovers are wont to do,--that is, when it pleased
+their fancy. Sometimes they would consult their captains first, and then
+come to me in despairing appeal. "Cap'n Scroby [Trowbridge] he acvise me
+not for marry dis lady, 'cause she hab seben cbil'en. What for use?
+Cap'n Scroby can't lub for me. I mus' lub for myself, and I lub he." I
+remember that on this occasion "he" stood by, a most unattractive woman,
+jet black, with an old pink muslin dress, torn white cotton gloves, and
+a very flowery bonnet, that must have descended through generations of
+tawdry mistresses.
+
+I felt myself compelled to reaffirm the decision of the inferior court.
+The result was as usual. They were married the next day, and I believe
+that she proved an excellent wife, though she had seven children, whose
+father was also in the regiment. If she did not, I know many others who
+did, and certainly I have never seen more faithful or more happy
+marriages than among that people.
+
+The question was often asked, whether the Southern slaves or the
+Northern free blacks made the best soldiers. It was a compliment to
+both classes that each officer usually preferred those whom he had
+personally commanded. I preferred those who had been slaves, for their
+greater docility and affectionateness, for the powerful stimulus
+which their new freedom gave, and for the fact that they were
+fighting, in a manner, for their own homes and firesides. Every one of
+these considerations afforded a special aid to discipline, and
+cemented a peculiar tie of sympathy between them and their officers.
+They seemed like clansmen, and had a more confiding and filial
+relation to us than seemed to me to exist in the Northern colored
+regiments.
+
+So far as the mere habits of slavery went, they were a poor preparation
+for military duty. Inexperienced officers often assumed that, because
+these men had been slaves before enlistment, they would bear to be
+treated as such afterwards. Experience proved the contrary. The more
+strongly we marked the difference between the slave and the soldier, the
+better for the regiment. One half of military duty lies in obedience,
+the other half in self-respect. A soldier without self-respect is
+worthless. Consequently there were no regiments in which it was so
+important to observe the courtesies and proprieties of military life as
+in these. I had to caution the officers to be more than usually
+particular in returning the salutations of the men; to be very careful
+in their dealings with those on picket or guard-duty; and on no account
+to omit the titles of the non-commissioned officers. So, in dealing out
+punishments, we had carefully to avoid all that was brutal and
+arbitrary, all that savored of the overseer. Any such dealing found them
+as obstinate and contemptuous as was Topsy when Miss Ophelia undertook
+to chastise her. A system of light punishments, rigidly administered
+according to the prescribed military forms, had more weight with them
+than any amount of angry severity. To make them feel as remote as
+possible from the plantation, this was essential. By adhering to this,
+and constantly appealing to their pride as soldiers and their sense of
+duty, we were able to maintain a high standard of discipline,--so, at
+least, the inspecting officers said,--and to get rid, almost entirely, of
+the more degrading class of punishments,--standing on barrels, tying up
+by the thumbs, and the ball and chain.
+
+In all ways we had to educate their self-respect. For instance, at
+first they disliked to obey their own non-commissioned officers. "I
+don't want him to play de white man ober me," was a sincere objection.
+They had been so impressed with a sense of inferiority that the
+distinction extended to the very principles of honor. "I ain't got
+colored-man principles," said Corporal London Simmons, indignantly
+defending himself from some charge before me. "I'se got white-gemman
+principles. I'se do my best. If Cap'n tell me to take a man, s'pose de
+man be as big as a house, I'll clam hold on him till I die, inception
+[excepting] I'm sick."
+
+But it was plain that this feeling was a bequest of slavery, which
+military life would wear off. We impressed it upon them that they did
+not obey their officers because they were white, but because they were
+their officers, just as the Captain must obey me, and I the General;
+that we were all subject to military law, and protected by it in turn.
+Then we taught them to take pride in having good material for
+noncommissioned officers among themselves, and in obeying them. On my
+arrival there was one white first sergeant, and it was a question
+whether to appoint others. This I prevented, but left that one, hoping
+the men themselves would at last petition for his removal, which at
+length they did. He was at once detailed on other duty. The
+picturesqueness of the regiment suffered, for he was very tall and fair,
+and I liked to see him step forward in the centre when the line of first
+sergeants came together at dress-parade. But it was a help to discipline
+to eliminate the Saxon, for it recognized a principle.
+
+Afterwards I had excellent battalion-drills without a single white
+officer, by way of experiment; putting each company under a sergeant,
+and going through the most difficult movements, such as
+division-columns and oblique-squares. And as to actual discipline, it
+is doing no injustice to the line-officers of the regiment to say that
+none of them received from the men more implicit obedience than
+Color-Sergeant Rivers. I should have tried to obtain commissions for
+him and several others before I left the regiment, had their literary
+education been sufficient; and such an attempt was finally made by
+Lieutenant-Colonel Trowbridge, my successor in immediate command, but
+it proved unsuccessful. It always seemed to me an insult to those
+brave men to have novices put over their heads, on the ground of color
+alone; and the men felt it the more keenly as they remained longer in
+service. There were more than seven hundred enlisted men in the
+regiment, when mustered out after more than three years' service. The
+ranks had been kept full by enlistment, but there were only fourteen
+line-officers instead of the full thirty. The men who should have
+filled those vacancies were doing duty as sergeants in the ranks.
+
+In what respect were the colored troops a source of disappointment? To
+me in one respect only,--that of health. Their health improved, indeed,
+as they grew more familiar with military life; but I think that neither
+their physical nor moral temperament gave them that toughness, that
+obstinate purpose of living, which sustains the more materialistic
+Anglo-Saxon. They had not, to be sure, the same predominant diseases,
+suffering in the pulmonary, not in the digestive organs; but they
+suffered a good deal. They felt malaria less, but they were more easily
+choked by dust and made ill by dampness. On the other hand, they
+submitted more readily to sanitary measures than whites, and, with
+efficient officers, were more easily kept clean. They were injured
+throughout the army by an undue share of fatigue duty, which is not only
+exhausting but demoralizing to a soldier; by the un-suitableness of the
+rations, which gave them salt meat instead of rice and hominy; and by
+the lack of good medical attendance. Their childlike constitutions
+peculiarly needed prompt and efficient surgical care; but almost all the
+colored troops were enlisted late in the war, when it was hard to get
+good surgeons for any regiments, and especially for these. In this
+respect I had nothing to complain of, since there were no surgeons in
+the army for whom I would have exchanged my own.
+
+And this late arrival on the scene affected not only the medical
+supervision of the colored troops, but their opportunity for a career.
+It is not my province to write their history, nor to vindicate them,
+nor to follow them upon those larger fields compared with which the
+adventures of my regiment appear but a partisan warfare. Yet this, at
+least, may be said. The operations on the South Atlantic coast, which
+long seemed a merely subordinate and incidental part of the great
+contest, proved to be one of the final pivots on which it turned. All
+now admit that the fate of the Confederacy was decided by Sherman's
+march to the sea. Port Royal was the objective point to which he
+marched, and he found the Department of the South, when he reached it,
+held almost exclusively by colored troops. Next to the merit of those
+who made the march was that of those who held open the door. That
+service will always remain among the laurels of the black regiments.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter 13
+Conclusion
+
+
+My personal forebodings proved to be correct, and so were the threats of
+the surgeons. In May, 1864, I went home invalided, was compelled to
+resign in October from the same cause, and never saw the First South
+Carolina again. Nor did any one else see it under that appellation, for
+about that time its name was changed to the Thirty-Third United States
+Colored Troops, "a most vague and heartless baptism," as the man in the
+story says. It was one of those instances of injudicious sacrifice of
+_esprit de corps_ which were so frequent in our army. All the pride of
+my men was centred in "de Fus' Souf"; the very words were a recognition
+of the loyal South as against the disloyal. To make the matter worse, it
+had been originally designed to apply the new numbering only to the new
+regiments, and so the early numbers were all taken up before the older
+regiments came in. The governors of States, by especial effort, saved
+their colored troops from this chagrin; but we found here, as more than
+once before, the disadvantage of having no governor to stand by us.
+"It's a far cry to Loch Awe," said the Highland proverb. We knew to our
+cost that it was a far cry to Washington in those days, unless an
+officer left his duty and stayed there all the time.
+
+In June, 1864, the regiment was ordered to Folly Island, and remained
+there and on Cole's Island till the siege of Charleston was done. It
+took part in the battle of Honey Hill, and in the capture of a fort on
+James Island, of which Corporal Robert Vendross wrote triumphantly in a
+letter, "When we took the pieces we found that we recapt our own pieces
+back that we lost on Willtown Revear (River) and thank the Lord did not
+lose but seven men out of our regiment."
+
+In February, 1865, the regiment was ordered to Charleston to do provost
+and guard duty, in March to Savannah, in June to Hamburg and Aiken, in
+September to Charleston and its neighborhood, and was finally mustered
+out of service--after being detained beyond its three years, so great was
+the scarcity of troops--on the 9th of February, 1866. With dramatic
+fitness this muster-out took place at Fort Wagner, above the graves of
+Shaw and his men. I give in the Appendix the farewell address of
+Lieutenant-Colonel Trowbridge, who commanded the regiment from the time
+I left it. Brevet Brigadier-General W. T. Bennett, of the One Hundred
+and Second United States Colored Troops, who was assigned to the
+command, never actually held it, being always in charge of a brigade.
+
+The officers and men are scattered far and wide. One of our captains
+was a member of the South Carolina Constitutional Convention, and is
+now State Treasurer; three of our sergeants were in that Convention,
+including Sergeant Prince Rivers; and he and Sergeant Henry Hayne are
+still members of the State Legislature. Both in that State and hi
+Florida the former members of the regiment are generally prospering,
+so far as I can hear. The increased self-respect of army life fitted
+them to do the duties of civil life. It is not in nature that the
+jealousy of race should die out in this generation, but I trust they
+will not see the fulfilment of Corporal Simon Cram's prediction. Simon
+was one of the shrewdest old fellows in the regiment, and he said to
+me once, as he was jogging out of Beaufort behind me, on the Shell
+Road, "I'se goin' to leave de Souf, Cunnel, when de war is over. I'se
+made up my mind dat dese yere Secesh will neber be cibilized in my
+time."
+
+The only member of the regiment whom I have seen since leaving it is a
+young man, Cyrus Wiggins, who was brought off from the main-land in a
+dug-out, in broad day, before the very eyes of the rebel pickets, by
+Captain James S. Rogers, of my regiment. It was one of the most daring
+acts I ever saw, and as it happened under my own observation I was glad
+when the Captain took home with him this "captive of his bow and spear"
+to be educated under his eye in Massachusetts. Cyrus has done credit to
+his friends, and will be satisfied with nothing short of a
+college-training at Howard University. I have letters from the men, very
+quaint in handwriting and spelling; but he is the only one whom I have
+seen. Some time I hope to revisit those scenes, and shall feel, no
+doubt, like a bewildered Rip Van Winkle who once wore uniform.
+
+We who served with the black troops have this peculiar satisfaction,
+that, whatever dignity or sacredness the memories of the war may have to
+others, they have more to us. In that contest all the ordinary ties of
+patriotism were the same, of course, to us as to the rest; they had no
+motives which we had not, as they have now no memories which are not
+also ours. But the peculiar privilege of associating with an outcast
+race, of training it to defend its rights and to perform its duties,
+this was our especial meed. The vacillating policy of the Government
+sometimes filled other officers with doubt and shame; until the negro
+had justice, they were but defending liberty with one hand and crushing
+it with the other. From this inconsistency we were free. Whatever the
+Government did, we at least were working in the right direction. If
+this was not recognized on our side of the lines, we knew that it was
+admitted on the other. Fighting with ropes round our necks, denied the
+ordinary courtesies of war till we ourselves compelled then: concession,
+we could at least turn this outlawry into a compliment. We had touched
+the pivot of the war. Whether this vast and dusky mass should prove the
+weakness of the nation or its strength, must depend in great measure, we
+knew, upon our efforts. Till the blacks were armed, there was no
+guaranty of their freedom. It was their demeanor under arms that shamed
+the nation into recognizing them as men.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+
+Appendix A
+
+Roster of Officers
+
+FIRST SOUTH CAROLINA VOLUNTEERS,
+
+Afterwards Thirty-Third United States Colored Troops.
+
+Colonels
+
+T. W. HIGGINSON, 51st Mass. Vols., Nov. 10, 1862; Resigned,
+
+Oct. 27, 1864. WM. T. BENNETT, 102d U. S. C. T., Dec. 18, 1864; Mustered out
+
+with regiment
+
+Lieutenant-Colonels
+
+LIBERTY BILLINGS, Civil Life, Nov. 1, 1862; Dismissed by Examining
+Board, July 28, 1863.
+
+JOHN D. STRONG, Promotion, July 28, 1863; Resigned, Aug. 15, 1864.
+
+CHAS. T. TROWBRIDGE, Promotion, Dec. 9, 1864; Mustered out, &c.
+
+Majors
+
+JOHN D. STRONG, Civil Life, Oct. 21, 1862; Lt-Col., July 28, 1863. CHAS.
+
+T. TROWBRIDGE, Promotion, Aug. 11, 1863; Lt.-Col., Dec.
+9, 1864.
+
+H. A. WHTTNEY, Promotion, Dec. 9, 1864; Mustered out, &c.
+
+Surgeons
+
+SETH ROGERS, Civil Life, Dec. 2, 1862; Resigned, Dec. 21, 1863.
+
+WM. B. CRANDALL, 29th Ct, June 8, 1864; Mustered out, &c.
+
+Assistant Surgeons
+
+J. M. HAWKS, Civil Life, Oct 20, 1862; Surgeon 3d S. C. Vols.,
+
+Oct. 29, 1863.
+
+THOS. T. MINOR, 7th Ct., Jan. 8, 1863; Resigned, Nov. 21, 1864.
+
+E. S. STUARD, Civil Life, Sept. 4, 1865; Mustered out, &c.
+
+Chaplain
+
+JAS. H. FOWLER, Civil Life, Oct. 24, 1862; Mustered out, &c.
+
+Captains
+
+CHAS. T. TROWBRIDGE, N. Y. Vol. Eng., Oct. 13, 1862; Major,
+Aug. 11, 1863.
+
+WM. JAMES, 100th Pa., Oct. 13, 1862; Mustered out, &c.
+
+W. J. RANDOLPH, 100th Pa., Oct. 13, 1862; Resigned, Jan. 29,
+1864.
+
+H. A. WHITNEY, 8th Me., Oct. 13, 1862; Major, Dec. 9, 1864.
+
+ALEX. HEASLEY, 100th Pa., Oct 13, 1862; Killed at Augusta, Ga.,
+Sept. 6, 1865.
+
+GEORGE DOLLY, 8th Me., Nov. 1, 1862; Resigned, Oct. 30, 1863.
+
+L. W. METCALF, 8th Me., Nov. 11, 1862; Mustered out, &c.
+
+JAS. H. TONKING, N. Y. Vol. Eng., Nov. 17, 1862; Resigned, July
+28, 1863.
+
+JAS. S. ROGERS, 51st Mass., Dec. 6, 1862; Resigned, Oct. 20, 1863.
+
+J. H. THIBADEAU, Promotion, Jan. 10, 1863; Mustered out, &c.
+
+GEORGE D. WALKER, Promotion, July 28, 1863; Resigned, Sept
+1, 1864.
+
+WM. H. DANILSON, Promotion, July 28, 1863; Major 128th
+U. S. C. T., May, 1865 [now 1st Lt 40th U. S. Infantry].
+
+WM. W. SAMPSON, Promotion, Nov. 5, 1863; Mustered out, &c.
+
+JOHN M. THOMPSON, Promotion, Nov. 7, 1863; Mustered out, &c.
+[Now 1st Lt. and Bvt Capt. 38th U. S. Infy.]
+
+ABR. W. JACKSON, Promotion, April 30, 1864; Resigned, Aug. 15, 1865.
+
+NILES G. PARKER, Promotion, Feb., 1865; Mustered out, &c.
+
+CHAS. W. HOOPER, Promotion, Sept, 1865; Mustered out, &c.
+
+E. C. MERMAM, Promotion, Sept., 1865; Resigned, Dec. 4, 1865.
+
+E. W. ROBBINS, Promotion, Nov. 1, 1865; Mustered out, &c.
+
+N. S. WHITE, Promotion, Nov. 18, 1865; Mustered out, &c.
+
+First Lieutenants
+
+G. W. DEWHURST (Adjutant), Civil Life, Oct 20, 1862; Resigned, Aug.
+31, 1865.
+
+J. M. BINOHAM (Quartermaster), Civil Life, Oct. 20, 1862; Died
+from effect of exhaustion on a military expedition, July 20,
+1863.
+
+G. M. CHAMBERUN (Quartermaster), llth Mass. Battery, Aug.
+29, 1863; Mustered out, &c.
+
+GEO. D. WALKER, N. Y. VoL Eng., Oct 13,
+1862; Captain, Aug. 11, 1863.
+
+W. H. DANILSON, 48th N. Y., Oct 13, 1862; Captain, July 26,
+1863.
+
+J. H. THTBADEAU, 8th Me., Oct 13, 1862; Captain, Jan. 10, 1863.
+
+EPHRAIM P. WHITE, 8th Me., Nov. 14, 1862; Resigned, March 9,
+1864.
+
+JAS. POMEROY, 100th Pa., Oct 13,1862; Resigned, Feb. 9, 1863.
+
+JAS. F. JOHNSTON, 100th Pa., Oct 13, 1862; Resigned, March 26,
+1863.
+
+JESSE FISHER, 48th N. Y., Oct 13, 1862; Resigned, Jan. 26, 1863.
+
+CHAS. I. DAVIS, 8th Me., Oct 13, 1862; Resigned, Feb. 28, 1863.
+
+WM. STOCKDALE, 8th Me., Oct 13, 1862; Resigned, May 2, 1863.
+
+JAS. B. O'NEIL, Promotion, Jan. 10, 1863; Resigned, May 2, 1863.
+
+W. W. SAMPSON, Promotion, Jan. 10, 1863; Captain, Oct 30,
+
+1863. J. M. THOMPSON, Promotion, Jan. 27, 1863; Captain, Oct. 30,
+
+1863. R. M. GASTON, Promotion, April 15, 1863; Killed at Coosaw
+Ferry, S. C., May 27, 1863.
+
+JAS. B. WEST, Promotion, Feb. 28, 1863; Resigned, June 14, 1865.
+
+N. G. PARKER, Promotion, May 5, 1863; Captain, Feb., 1865.
+
+W. H. HYDE, Promotion, May 5, 1863; Resigned, April 3, 1865.
+
+HENRY A. STONE, 8th Me., June 26, 1863; Resigned, Dec. 16,
+1864.
+
+J. A. TROWBRTDGE, Promotion, Aug. 11, 1863; Resigned, Nov. 29,
+1864.
+
+A. W. JACKSON, Promotion, Aug. 26, 1863; Captain, April 30,
+1864.
+
+CHAS. E. PARKER, Promotion, Aug. 26, 1863; Resigned, Nov. 29,
+1864.
+
+CHAS. W. HOOPER, Promotion, Nov. 8, 1863; Captain, Sept., 1865.
+
+E. C. MERRIAM, Promotion, Nov. 19, 1863; Captain, Sept., 1865.
+
+HENRY A. BEACH, Promotion, April 30, 1864; Resigned, Sept 23,
+1864.
+
+E. W. ROBBINS, Promotion, April 30, 1864; Captain, Nov. 1,
+1865.
+
+ASA CHILD, Promotion, Sept, 1865; Mastered out, &c.
+
+N. S. WHITE, Promotion, Sept, 1865; Captain, Nov. 18, 1865.
+
+F. S. GOODRICH, Promotion, Oct., 1865; Mustered out, &c.
+
+E. W. HYDE, Promotion, Oct 27, 1865; Mustered out, &c.
+
+HENRY WOOD, Promotion, Nov., 1865; Mustered out, &c.
+
+
+
+Second Lieutenants
+
+J. A. TROWBMDGE, N. Y. Vol. Eng., Oct 13, 1862; First Lt, Aug.
+11, 1863.
+
+JAS. B. O-NBIL, 1st U. S. Art'y, Oct 13, 1862; First Lt, Jan. 10,
+1863.
+
+W. W. SAMPSON, 8th Me., Oct 13, 1862; First Lt, Jan 10, 1863.
+
+J. M. THOMPSON, 7th N. H., Oct 13, 1862; First Lt, Jan. 27, 1863.
+
+R. M. GASTON, 100th Pa., Oct. 13, 1862; First Lt, April 15, 1863.
+
+W. H. HYDE, 6th Ct, Oct 13, 1862; First Lt, May 5, 1863.
+
+JAS. B. WEST, 100th Pa., Oct. 13. 1862; First Lt, Feb. 28, 1863.
+
+HARRY C. WEST, 100th Pa., Oct 13, 1862; Resigned, Nov. 4,
+1864.
+
+E. C. MERRIAM, 8th Me., Nov. 17, 1862; First Lt., Nov. 19, 1863.
+
+CHAS. E. PARKER, 8th Me., Nov. 17, 1862; First Lt, Aug. 26,
+1863.
+
+C. W. HOOPER, N. Y. Vol. Eng., Feb. 17, 1863; First Lt, April
+15, 1863.
+
+N. G. PARKER, 1st Mass. Cavalry, March, 1863; First Lt, May
+5, 1863.
+
+A. H. TIRRELL, 1st Mass. Cav., March 6, 1863; Resigned, July
+22, 1863.
+
+A. W. JACKSON, 8th Me., March 6, 1863; First Lt, Aug. 26, 1863.
+
+HENRY A. BEACH, 48th N. Y., April 5, 1863; First Lt, April 30, 1864.
+
+E. W. ROBBINS, 8th Me., April 5, 1863; First Lt, April 30, 1864.
+
+A. B. BROWN, Civil Life, April 17, 1863; Resigned, Nov. 27, 1863.
+
+F. M. GOULD, 3d R. I. Battery, June 1, 1863; Resigned, June 8, 1864.
+
+ASA CHILD, 8th Me., Aug. 7, 1863; First Lt, Sept., 1865.
+
+JEROME T. FDRMAN, 52d Pa., Aug. 30, 1863; Killed at Walhalla,
+S. C., Aug. 26, 1865.
+
+JOHN W. SELVAGE, 48th N. Y., Sept 10, 1863; First Lt. 36th
+U. S. C. T., March, 1865.
+
+MIRAND W. SAXTON, Civil Life, Nov. 19, 1863;
+Captain 128th U. S. C. T., June 25, 1864 [now Second Lt 38th U. S. Infantry].
+
+NELSON S. WHITE, Dec. 22, 1863; First Lt, Sept., 1865.
+
+EDW. W. HYDE, Civil Life, May 4, 1864; First Lt, Oct. 27, 1865.
+
+F. S. GOODRICH, 115th N. Y., May, 1864; First Lt., Oct., 1865.
+
+B. H. MANNING, Aug. 11, 1864; Capt 128th U. S. C. T., March
+17, 1865.
+
+R. M. DAVIS, 4th Mass. Cavalry, Nov. 19, 1864; Capt. 104th
+U. S. C. T., May 11, 1865.
+
+HENRY WOOD, N. Y. Vol. Eng., Aug., 1865; First Lt, Nov., 1865.
+
+JOHN M. SEAKLES, 1st N. Y. Mounted Rifles, June 15, 1865;
+Mustered out, &c.
+
+
+
+
+Appendix B
+The First Black Soldiers
+
+
+It is well known that the first systematic attempt to organize colored
+troops during the war of the rebellion was the so-called "Hunter
+Regiment." The officer originally detailed to recruit for this purpose
+was Sergeant C. T. Trowbridge, of the New York Volunteer Engineers (Col.
+Serrell). His detail was dated May 7, 1862, S. O. 84 Dept. South.
+
+Enlistments came in very slowly, and no wonder. The white officers and
+soldiers were generally opposed to the experiment, and filled the ears
+of the negroes with the same tales which had been told them by their
+masters,--that the Yankees really meant to sell them to Cuba, and the
+like. The mildest threats were that they would be made to work without
+pay (which turned out to be the case), and that they would be put in the
+front rank in every battle. Nobody could assure them that they and their
+families would be freed by the Government, if they fought for it, since
+no such policy had been adopted. Nevertheless, they gradually enlisted,
+the most efficient recruiting officer being Sergeant William Bronson, of
+Company A, in my regiment, who always prided himself on this service,
+and used to sign himself by the very original title, "No. 1, African
+Foundations" in commemoration of his deeds.
+
+By patience and tact these obstacles would in time have been overcome.
+But before long, unfortunately, some of General Hunter's staff became
+impatient, and induced him to take the position that the blacks _must_
+enlist. Accordingly, squads of soldiers were sent to seize all the
+able-bodied men on certain plantations, and bring them to the camp.
+The immediate consequence was a renewal of the old suspicion, ending
+in a widespread belief that they were to be sent to Cuba, as their
+masters had predicted. The ultimate result was a habit of distrust,
+discontent, and desertion, that it was almost impossible to surmount.
+All the men who knew anything about General Hunter believed in him;
+but they all knew that there were bad influences around him, and that
+the Government had repudiated his promises. They had been kept four
+months in service, and then had been dismissed without pay. That
+having been the case, why should not the Government equally repudiate
+General Saxton's promises or mine? As a matter of fact, the Govenment
+did repudiate these pledges for years, though we had its own written
+authority to give them. But that matter needs an appendix by itself.
+
+The "Hunter Regiment" remained in camp on Hilton Head Island until the
+beginning of August, 1862, kept constantly under drill, but much
+demoralized by desertion. It was then disbanded, except one company.
+That company, under command of Sergeant Trowbridge, then acting as
+Captain, but not commissioned, was kept in service, and was sent (August
+5, 1862) to garrison St. Simon's Island, on the coast of Georgia. On
+this island (made famous by Mrs. Kemble's description) there were then
+five hundred colored people, and not a single white man.
+
+The black soldiers were sent down on the Ben De Ford, Captain Hallett.
+On arriving, Trowbridge was at once informed by Commodore Goldsborough,
+naval commander at that station, that there was a party of rebel
+guerillas on the island, and was asked whether he would trust his
+soldiers in pursuit of them. Trowbridge gladly assented; and the
+Commodore added, "If you should capture them, it will be a great thing
+for you."
+
+They accordingly went on shore, and found that the colored men of the
+island had already undertaken the enterprise. Twenty-five of them had
+armed themselves, under the command of one of their own number, whose
+name was John Brown. The second in command was Edward Gould, who was
+afterwards a corporal in my own regiment The rebel party retreated
+before these men, and drew them into a swamp. There was but one path,
+and the negroes entered single file. The rebels lay behind a great
+log, and fired upon them. John Brown, the leader, fell dead within six
+feet of the log,--probably the first black man who fell under arms in
+the war,--several other were wounded, and the band of raw recruits
+retreated; as did also the rebels, in the opposite direction. This was
+the first armed encounter, so far as I know, between the rebels and
+their former slaves; and it is worth noticing that the attempt was a
+spontaneous thing and not accompanied by any white man. The men were
+not soldiers, nor in uniform, though some of them afterwards enlisted
+in Trowbridge's company.
+
+The father of this John Brown was afterwards a soldier in my regiment;
+and, after his discharge for old age, was, for a time, my servant.
+"Uncle York," as we called him, was as good a specimen of a saint as I
+have ever met, and was quite the equal of Mrs. Stowe's "Uncle Tom." He
+was a fine-looking old man, with dignified and courtly manners, and his
+gray head was a perfect benediction, as he sat with us on the platform
+at our Sunday meetings. He fully believed, to his dying day, that the
+"John Brown Song" related to his son, and to him only.
+
+Trowbridge, after landing on the island, hunted the rebels all day with
+his colored soldiers, and a posse of sailors. In one place, he found by
+a creek a canoe, with a tar-kettle, and a fire burning; and it was
+afterwards discovered that, at that very moment, the guerillas were hid
+in a dense palmetto thicket, near by, and so eluded pursuit The rebel
+leader was one Miles Hazard, who had a plantation on the island, and the
+party escaped at last through the aid of his old slave, Henry, who found
+them a boat One of my sergeants, Clarence Kennon, who had not then
+escaped from slavery, was present when they reached the main-land; and
+he described them as being tattered and dirty from head to foot, after
+their efforts to escape their pursuers.
+
+When the troops under my command occupied Jacksonville, Fla., in March
+of the following year, we found at the railroad station, packed for
+departure, a box of papers, some of them valuable. Among them was a
+letter from this very Hazard to some friend, describing the perils of
+that adventure, and saying, "If you wish to know hell before your time,
+go to St Simon's and be hunted ten days by niggers."
+
+I have heard Trowbridge say that not one of his men flinched; and they
+seemed to take delight in the pursuit, though the weather was very hot,
+and it was fearfully exhausting.
+
+This was early in August; and the company remained two months at St
+Simon's, doing picket duty within hearing of the rebel drums, though
+not another scout ever ventured on the island, to their knowledge.
+Every Saturday Trowbridge summoned the island people to drill with his
+soldiers; and they came in hordes, men, women, and children, in every
+imaginable garb, to the number of one hundred and fifty or two
+hundred.
+
+His own men were poorly clothed and hardly shod at all; and, as no new
+supply of uniform was provided, they grew more and more ragged. They got
+poor rations, and no pay; but they kept up their spirits. Every week or
+so some of them would go on scouting excursions to the main-land; one
+scout used to go regularly to his old mother's hut, and keep himself hid
+under her bed, while she collected for him all the latest news of rebel
+movements. This man never came back without bringing recruits with him.
+
+At last the news came that Major-General Mitchell had come to relieve
+General Hunter, and that Brigadier-General Saxton had gone North; and
+Trowbridge went to Hilton Head in some anxiety to see if he and his men
+were utterly forgotten. He prepared a report, showing the services and
+claims of his men, and took it with him. This was early in October,
+1862. The first person he met was Brigadier-General Saxton, who informed
+him that he had authority to organize five thousand colored troops, and
+that he (Trowbridge) should be senior captain of the first regiment
+
+This was accordingly done; and Company A of the First South Carolina
+could honestly claim to date its enlistment back to May, 1862, although
+they never got pay for that period of their service, and their date of
+muster was November, IS, 1862.
+
+The above facts were written down from the narration of
+Lieutenant-Colonel Trowbridge, who may justly claim to have been the
+first white officer to recruit and command colored troops in this war.
+He was constantly in command of them from May 9, 1862, to February
+9, 1866.
+
+Except the Louisiana soldiers mentioned in the Introduction,--of whom no
+detailed reports have, I think, been published,--my regiment was
+unquestionably the first mustered into the service of the United States;
+the first company muster bearing date, November 7, 1862, and the others
+following in quick succession.
+
+The second regiment in order of muster was the "First Kansas Colored,"
+dating from January 13, 1863. The first enlistment in the Kansas
+regiment goes back to August 6, 1862; while the earliest technical
+date of enlistment in my regiment was October 19, 1862, although, as
+was stated above, one company really dated its organization back to
+May, 1862. My muster as colonel dates back to November 10, 1862,
+several months earlier than any other of which I am aware, among
+colored regiments, except that of Colonel Stafford (First Louisiana
+Native Guards), September 27, 1862. Colonel Williams, of the "First
+Kansas Colored," was mustered as lieutenant-colonel on January 13,
+1863; as colonel, March 8, 1863. These dates I have (with the other
+facts relating to the regiment) from Colonel R. J. Hinton, the first
+officer detailed to recruit it.
+
+To sum up the above facts: my late regiment had unquestioned priority in
+muster over all but the Louisiana regiments. It had priority over those
+in the actual organization and term of service of one company. On the
+other hand, the Kansas regiment had the priority in average date of
+enlistment, according to the muster-rolls.
+
+The first detachment of the Second South Carolina Volunteers (Colonel
+Montgomery) went into camp at Port Royal Island, February 23, 1863,
+numbering one hundred and twenty men. I do not know the date of his
+muster; it was somewhat delayed, but was probably dated back to about
+that time.
+
+Recruiting for the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts (colored) began on
+February 9, 1863, and the first squad went into camp at Read-ville,
+Massachusetts, on February 21, 1863, numbering twenty-five men. Colonel
+Shaw's commission (and probably his muster) was dated April 17, 1863.
+(Report of Adjutant-General of Massachusetts for 1863, pp. 896-899.)
+
+These were the earliest colored regiments, so far as I know.
+
+
+
+
+Appendix C
+General Saxton's Instructions
+
+
+[The following are the instructions under which my regiment was raised.
+It will be seen how unequivocal were the provisions in respect to pay,
+upon which so long and weary a contest was waged by our friends in
+Congress, before the fulfilment of the contract could be secured.]
+
+WAR DEPARTMENT,
+WASHINGTON CITY, D. C.,
+August 25, 1862.
+
+GENERAL,
+Your despatch of the 16th has this moment been received. It is
+considered by the Department that the instructions given at the time of
+your appointment were sufficient to enable you to do what you have now
+requested authority for doing. But in order to place your authority
+beyond all doubt, you are hereby authorized and instructed,
+
+1st, To organize in any convenient organization, by squads, companies,
+battalions, regiments, and brigades, or otherwise, colored persons of
+African descent for volunteer laborers, to a number not exceeding fifty
+thousand, and muster them into the service of the United States for the
+term of the war, at a rate of compensation not exceeding five dollars
+per month for common laborers, and eight dollars per month for
+mechanical or skilled laborers, and assign them to the Quartermaster's
+Department, to do and perform such laborer's duty as may be required
+during the present war, and to be subject to the rules and articles of war.
+
+2d. The laboring forces herein authorized shall, under the order of the
+General-in-Chief, or of this Department, be detailed by the
+Quartermaster-General for laboring service with the armies of the United
+States; and they shall be clothed and subsisted, after enrolment, in the
+same manner as other persons in the Quartermaster's service.
+
+3d. In view of the small force under your command, and the inability of
+the Government at the present time to increase it, in order to guard the
+plantations and settlements occupied by the United States from invasion,
+and protect the inhabitants thereof from captivity and murder by the
+enemy, you are also authorized to arm, uniform, equip, and receive into
+the service of the United States, such number of volunteers of African
+descent as you may deem expedient, not exceeding five thousand, and may
+detail officers to instruct them in military drill, discipline, and
+duty, and to command them. The persons so received into service, and
+their officers, to be entitled to, and receive, the same pay and rations
+as are allowed, by law, to volunteers in the service.
+
+4th. You will occupy, if possible, all the islands and plantations
+heretofore occupied by the Government, and secure and harvest the crops,
+and cultivate and improve the plantations.
+
+5th. The population of African descent that cultivate the lands and
+perform the labor of the rebels constitute a large share of their
+military strength, and enable the white masters to fill the rebel
+armies, and wage a cruel and murderous war against the people of the
+Northern States. By reducing the laboring strength of the rebels, their
+miltary power will be reduced. You are therefore authorized by every
+means in your power, to withdraw from the enemy their laboring force and
+population, and to spare no effort, consistent with civilized warfare,
+to weaken, harass, and annoy them, and to establish the authority of the
+Government of the United States within your Department.
+
+6th. You may turn over to the navy any number of colored volunteers that
+may be required for the naval service.
+
+7th. By recent act of Congress, all men and boys received into the
+service of the United States, who may have been the slaves of rebel
+masters, are, with their wives, mothers, and children, declared to be
+forever free. You and all in your command will so treat and regard them.
+
+Yours truly,
+
+EDWIN M. STANTON,
+
+Secretary of War. BRIGADIER-GENERAL SAXTON.
+
+
+
+
+Appendix D
+The Struggle for Pay
+
+
+The story of the attempt to cut down the pay of the colored troops is
+too long, too complicated, and too humiliating, to be here narrated.
+In the case of my regiment there stood on record the direct pledge of
+the War Department to General Saxton that their pay should be the same
+as that of whites. So clear was this that our kind paymaster, Major W.
+J. Wood, of New Jersey, took upon himself the responsibility of
+paying the price agreed upon, for five months, till he was compelled
+by express orders to reduce it from thirteen dollars per month to ten
+dollars, and from that to seven dollars,--the pay of quartermaster's
+men and day-laborers. At the same time the "stoppages" from the
+pay-rolls for the loss of all equipments and articles of clothing
+remained the same as for all other soldiers, so that it placed the men
+in the most painful and humiliating condition. Many of them had
+families to provide for, and between the actual distress, the sense of
+wrong, the taunts of those who had refused to enlist from the fear of
+being cheated, and the doubt how much farther the cheat might be
+carried, the poor fellows were goaded to the utmost. In the Third
+South Carolina regiment, Sergeant William Walker was shot, by order of
+court-marital, for leading his company to stack arms before their
+captain's tent, on the avowed ground that they were released from duty
+by the refusal of the Government to fulfill its share of the contract.
+The fear of such tragedies spread a cloud of solicitude over every
+camp of colored soldiers for more than a year, and the following
+series of letters will show through what wearisome labors the final
+triumph of justice was secured. In these labors the chief credit must
+be given to my admirable Adjutant, Lieutenant G. W. Dewhurst In the
+matter of bounty justice is not yet obtained; there is a
+discrimination against those colored soldiers who were slaves on April
+19, 1861. Every officer, who through indolence or benevolent design
+claimed on his muster-rolls that all his men had been free on that
+day, secured for them the bounty; while every officer who, like
+myself, obeyed orders and told the truth in each case, saw his men and
+their families suffer for it, as I have done. A bill to abolish this
+distinction was introduced by Mr. Wilson at the last session, but
+failed to pass the House. It is hoped that next winter may remove this
+last vestige of the weary contest
+
+To show how persistently and for how long a period these claims had to
+be urged on Congress, I reprint such of my own printed letters on the
+subject as are now in my possession. There are one or two of which I
+have no copies. It was especially in the Senate that it was so difficult
+to get justice done; and our thanks will always be especially due to
+Hon. Charles Sumner and Hon. Henry Wilson for their advocacy of our
+simple rights. The records of those sessions will show who advocated the
+fraud.
+
+To the Editor of the _New York Tribune_:
+
+SIR,--No one can overstate the intense anxiety with which the officers of
+colored regiments in this Department are awaiting action from Congress
+in regard to arrears of pay of their men.
+
+It is not a matter of dollars and cents only; it is a question of common
+honesty,--whether the United States Government has sufficient integrity
+for the fulfillment of an explicit business contract.
+
+The public seems to suppose that all required justice will be done by
+the passage of a bill equalizing the pay of all soldiers for the future.
+But, so far as my own regiment is concerned, this is but half the
+question. My men have been nearly sixteen months in the service, and for
+them the immediate issue is the question of arrears.
+
+They understand the matter thoroughly, if the public do not Every one
+of them knows that he volunteered under an explicit _written
+assurance_ from the War Department that he should have the pay of a
+white soldier. He knows that for five months the regiment received
+that pay, after which it was cut down from the promised thirteen
+dollars per month to ten dollars, for some reason to him inscrutable.
+
+He does _not_ know for I have not yet dared to tell the men--that the
+Paymaster has been already reproved by the Pay Department for fulfilling
+even in part the pledges of the War Department; that at the next payment
+the ten dollars are to be further reduced to seven; and that, to crown
+the whole, all the previous overpay is to be again deducted or "stopped"
+from the future wages, thus leaving them a little more than a dollar a
+month for six months to come, unless Congress interfere!
+
+Yet so clear were the terms of the contract that Mr. Solicitor Whiting,
+having examined the original instructions from the War Department issued
+to Brigadier-General Saxton, Military Governor, admits to me (under date
+of December 4, 1863,) that "the faith of the Government was thereby
+pledged to every officer and soldier enlisted under that call."
+
+He goes on to express the generous confidence that "the pledge will be
+honorably fulfilled." I observe that every one at the North seems to
+feel the same confidence, but that, meanwhile, the pledge is
+unfulfilled. Nothing is said in Congress about fulfilling it. I have not
+seen even a proposition in Congress to pay the colored soldiers, _from
+date of enlistment_, the same pay with white soldiers; and yet anything
+short of that is an unequivocal breach of contract, so far as this
+regiment is concerned.
+
+Meanwhile, the land sales are beginning, and there is danger of every
+foot of land being sold from beneath my soldiers' feet, because they
+have not the petty sum which Government first promised, and then refused
+to pay.
+
+The officers' pay comes promptly and fully enough, and this makes the
+position more embarrassing. For how are we to explain to the men the
+mystery that Government can afford us a hundred or two dollars a month,
+and yet must keep back six of the poor thirteen which it promised them?
+Does it not naturally suggest the most cruel suspicions in regard to us?
+And yet nothing but their childlike faith in their officers, and in that
+incarnate soul of honor, General Saxton, has sustained their faith, or
+kept them patient, thus far.
+
+There is nothing mean or mercenary about these men in general.
+Convince them that the Government actually needs their money, and they
+would serve it barefooted and on half-rations, and without a
+dollar--for a time. But, unfortunately, they see white soldiers beside
+them, whom they know to be in no way their superiors for any military
+service, receiving hundreds of dollars for re-enlisting for this
+impoverished Government, which can only pay seven dollars out of
+thirteen to its black regiments. And they see, on the other hand,
+those colored men who refused to volunteer as soldiers, and who have
+found more honest paymasters than the United States Government, now
+exulting in well-filled pockets, and able to buy the little homesteads
+the soldiers need, and to turn the soldiers' families into the
+streets. Is this a school for self-sacrificing patriotism?
+
+I should not speak thus urgently were it not becoming manifest that
+there is to be no promptness of action in Congress, even as regards the
+future pay of colored soldiers,--and that there is especial danger of the
+whole matter of _arrears_ going by default Should it be so, it will be a
+repudiation more ungenerous than any which Jefferson Davis advocated or
+Sydney Smith denounced. It will sully with dishonor all the nobleness of
+this opening page of history, and fix upon the North a brand of meanness
+worse than either Southerner or Englishman has yet dared to impute. The
+mere delay in the fulfillment of this contract has already inflicted
+untold suffering, has impaired discipline, has relaxed loyalty, and has
+begun to implant a feeling of sullen distrust in the very regiments
+whose early career solved the problem of the nation, created a new army,
+and made peaceful emancipation possible.
+
+T. W. HIGGINSON, Colonel commanding 1st S. C. Vols.
+
+BEAUFORT, S. C., January 22, 1864.
+
+HEADQUARTERS FIRST SOUTH CAROLINA VOLUNTEERS, BEAUFORT, S. C., Sunday,
+February 14, 1864.
+
+
+
+To the Editor of the _New York Times_:
+
+May I venture to call your attention to the great and cruel injustice
+which is impending over the brave men of this regiment?
+
+They have been in military service for over a year, having volunteered,
+every man, without a cent of bounty, on the written pledge of the War
+Department that they should receive the same pay and rations with white
+soldiers.
+
+This pledge is contained in the written instructions of
+Brigadier-General Saxton, Military Governor, dated August 25, 1862. Mr.
+Solicitor Whiting, having examined those instructions, admits to me that
+"the faith of the Government was thereby pledged to every officer and
+soldier under that call."
+
+Surely, if this fact were understood, every man in the nation would see
+that the Government is degraded by using for a year the services of the
+brave soldiers, and then repudiating the contract under which they were
+enlisted. This is what will be done, should Mr. Wilson's bill,
+legalizing the back pay of the army, be defeated.
+
+We presume too much on the supposed ignorance of these men. I have never
+yet found a man in my regiment so stupid as not to know when he was
+cheated. If fraud proceeds from Government itself, so much the worse,
+for this strikes at the foundation of all rectitude, all honor, all
+obligation.
+
+Mr. Senator Fessenden said, in the debate on Mr. Wilson's bill, January
+4, that the Government was not bound by the unauthorized promises of
+irresponsible recruiting officers. But is the Government itself an
+irresponsible recruiting officer? and if men have volunteered in good
+faith on the written assurances of the Secretary of War, is not Congress
+bound, in all decency, either to fulfill those pledges or to disband the
+regiments?
+
+Mr. Senator Doolittle argued in the same debate that white soldiers
+should receive higher pay than black ones, because the families of the
+latter were often supported by Government What an astounding statement
+of fact is this! In the white regiment in which I was formerly an
+officer (the Massachusetts Fifty-First) nine tenths of the soldiers'
+families, in addition to the pay and bounties, drew regularly their
+"State aid." Among my black soldiers, with half-pay and no bounty, not a
+family receives any aid. Is there to be no limit, no end to the
+injustice we heap upon this unfortunate people? Cannot even the fact of
+their being in arms for the nation, liable to die any day in its
+defence, secure them ordinary justice? Is the nation so poor, and so
+utterly demoralized by its pauperism, that after it has had the lives of
+these men, it must turn round to filch six dollars of the monthly pay
+which the Secretary of War promised to their widows? It is even so, if
+the excuses of Mr. Fressenden and Mr. Doolittle are to be accepted by
+Congress and by the people.
+
+Very respectfully, your obedient servant,
+
+T, W. HIGGINSON, Colonel commanding 1st S. C. Volunteers.
+
+NEW VICTORIES AND OLD WRONGS To the Editors of the Evening Post:
+
+On the 2d of July, at James Island, S. C., a battery was taken by three
+regiments, under the following circumstances:
+
+The regiments were the One Hundred and Third New York (white), the
+Thirty-Third United States (formerly First South Carolina Volunteers),
+and the Fifty-Fifth Massachusetts, the two last being colored. They
+marched at one A. M., by the flank, in the above order, hoping to
+surprise the battery. As usual the rebels were prepared for them, and
+opened upon them as they were deep in one of those almost impassable
+Southern marshes. The One Hundred and Third New York, which had
+previously been in twenty battles, was thrown into confusion; the
+Thirty-Third United States did better, being behind; the Fifty-Fifth
+Massachusetts being in the rear, did better still. All three formed in
+line, when Colonel Hartwell, commanding the brigade, gave the order to
+retreat. The officer commanding the Fifty-Fifth Massachusetts, either
+misunderstanding the order, or hearing it countermanded, ordered his
+regiment to charge. This order was at once repeated by Major Trowbridge,
+commanding the Thirty-Third United States, and by the commander of the
+One Hundred and Third New York, so that the three regiments reached the
+fort in reversed order. The color-bearers of the Thirty-Third United
+States and of the Fifty-Fifth Massachusetts had a race to be first in,
+the latter winning. The One Hundred and Third New York entered the
+battery immediately after.
+
+These colored regiments are two of the five which were enlisted in South
+Carolina and Massachusetts, under the written pledge of the War
+Department that they should have the same pay and allowances as white
+soldiers. That pledge has been deliberately broken by the War
+Department, or by Congress, or by both, except as to the short period,
+since last New-Year's Day. Every one of those killed in this action from
+these two colored regiments under a fire before which the veterans of
+twently battles recoiled _died defrauded by the Government of nearly one
+half his petty pay_.
+
+Mr. Fessenden, who defeated in the Senate the bill for the fulfillment
+of the contract with these soldiers, is now Secretary of the Treasury.
+Was the economy of saving six dollars per man worth to the Treasury the
+ignominy of the repudiation?
+
+Mr. Stevens, of Pennsylvania, on his triumphal return to his
+constituents, used to them this language: "He had no doubt whatever as
+to the final result of the present contest between liberty and
+slavery. The only doubt he had was whether the nation had yet been
+satisfactorily chastised for their cruel oppression of a harmless and
+long-suffering race." Inasmuch as it was Mr. Stevens himself who
+induced the House of Representatives, most unexpectedly to all, to
+defeat the Senate bill for the fulfillment of the national contract
+with these soldiers, I should think he had excellent reasons for the
+doubt.
+
+Very respectfully,
+
+T. W. HIGGINSON,
+Colonel 1st S. C. Vols (now 33d U. S.) July 10, 1864.
+
+
+
+To the Editor of the _New York Tribune_:
+
+No one can possibly be so weary of reading of the wrongs done by
+Government toward the colored soldiers as am I of writing about them.
+This is my only excuse for intruding on your columns again.
+
+By an order of the War Department, dated August 1, 1864, it is at length
+ruled that colored soldiers shall be paid the full pay of soldiers from
+date of enlistment, provided they were free on April 19, 1861,--not
+otherwise; and this distinction is to be noted on the pay-rolls. In
+other words, if one half of a company escaped from slavery on April 18,
+1861, they are to be paid thirteen dollars per month and allowed three
+dollars and a half per month for clothing. If the other half were
+delayed two days, they receive seven dollars per month and are allowed
+three dollars per month for precisely the same articles of clothing. If
+one of the former class is made first sergeant, Us pay is put up to
+twenty-one dollars per month; but if he escaped two days later, his pay
+is still estimated at seven dollars.
+
+It had not occurred to me that anything could make the payrolls of these
+regiments more complicated than at present, or the men more rationally
+discontented. I had not the ingenuity to imagine such an order. Yet it
+is no doubt in accordance with the spirit, if not with the letter, of
+the final bill which was adopted by Congress under the lead of Mr.
+Thaddeus Stevens.
+
+The ground taken by Mr. Stevens apparently was that the country might
+honorably save a few dollars by docking the promised pay of those
+colored soldiers whom the war had made free. _But the Government
+should have thought of this before it made the contract with these men
+and received their services_. When the War Department instructed
+Brigadier-General Saxton, August 25, 1862, to raise five regiments of
+negroes in South Carolina, it was known very well that the men so
+enlisted had only recently gained their freedom. But the instructions
+said: "The persons so received into service, and their officers, to be
+entitled to and receive the same pay and rations as are allowed by law
+to volunteers in the service." Of this passage Mr. Solicitor Whiting
+wrote to me: "I have no hesitation in saying that the faith of the
+Government was thereby pledged to every officer and soldier enlisted
+under that call." Where is that faith of the Government now?
+
+The men who enlisted under the pledge were volunteers, every one; they
+did not get their freedom by enlisting; they had it already. They
+enlisted to serve the Government, trusting in its honor. Now the nation
+turns upon them and says: Your part of the contract is fulfilled; we
+have had your services. If you can show that you had previously been
+free for a certain length of time, we will fulfil the other side of the
+contract. If not, we repudiate it Help yourselves, if you can.
+
+In other words, a freedman (since April 19, 1861) has no rights which a
+white man is bound to respect. He is incapable of making a contract No
+man is bound by a contract made with him. Any employer, following the
+example of the United States Government, may make with him a written
+agreement receive his services, and then withhold the wages. He has no
+motive to honest industry, or to honesty of any kind. He is virtually a
+slave, and nothing else, to the end of time.
+
+Under this order, the greater part of the Massachusetts colored
+regiments will get their pay at last and be able to take their wives and
+children out of the almshouses, to which, as Governor Andrew informs us,
+the gracious charity of the nation has consigned so many. For so much I
+am grateful. But toward my regiment, which had been in service and under
+fire, months before a Northern colored soldier was recruited, the policy
+of repudiation has at last been officially adopted. There is no
+alternative for the officers of South Carolina regiments but to wait for
+another session of Congress, and meanwhile, if necessary, act as
+executioners for those soldiers who, like Sergeant Walker, refuse to
+fulfil their share of a contract where the Government has openly
+repudiated the other share. If a year's discussion, however, has at
+length secured the arrears of pay for the Northern colored regiments,
+possibly two years may secure it for the Southern.
+
+T. W. HIGGINSON,
+Colonel 1st S. C. Vols. (now 33d V. S.)
+
+August 12, 1864.
+
+
+
+To the Editor of the _New York Tribune_:
+
+SIR,--An impression seems to prevail in the newspapers that the lately
+published "opinion" of Attorney-General Bates (dated in July last) at
+length secures justice to the colored soldiers in respect to arrears of
+pay. This impression is a mistake.
+
+That "opinion" does indeed show that there never was any excuse for
+refusing them justice; but it does not, of itself, secure justice to them.
+
+It _logically_ covers the whole ground, and was doubtless intended to do
+so; but _technically_ it can only apply to those soldiers who were free
+at the commencement of the war. For it was only about these that the
+Attorney-General was officially consulted.
+
+Under this decision the Northern colored regiments have already got
+their arrears of pay,--and those few members of the Southern regiments
+who were free on April 19, 1861. But in the South Carolina regiments
+this only increases the dissatisfaction among the remainder, who
+volunteered under the same pledge of full pay from the War Department,
+and who do not see how the question of their _status_ at some antecedent
+period can affect an express contract If, in 1862, they were free enough
+to make a bargain with, they were certainly free enough to claim its
+fulfilment.
+
+The unfortunate decision of Mr. Solicitor Whiting, under which all our
+troubles arose, is indeed superseded by the reasoning of the
+Attorney-General. But unhappily that does not remedy the evil, which is
+already embodied in an Act of Congress, making the distinction between
+those who were and those who were not free on April 19, 1861.
+
+The question is, whether those who were not free at the breaking out of
+the war are still to be defrauded, after the Attorney-General has shown
+that there is no excuse for defrauding them?
+
+I call it defrauding, because it is not a question of abstract justice,
+but of the fulfilment of an express contract
+
+I have never met with a man, whatever might be his opinions as to the
+enlistment of colored soldiers, who did not admit that if they had
+volunteered under the direct pledge of full pay from the War Department,
+they were entitled to every cent of it. That these South Carolina
+regiments had such direct pledge is undoubted, for it still exists in
+writing, signed by the Secretary of War, and has never been disputed.
+
+It is therefore the plain duty of Congress to repeal the law which
+discriminates between different classes of colored soldiers, or at least
+so to modify it as to secure the fulfilment of actual contracts. Until
+this is done the nation is still disgraced. The few thousand dollars in
+question are nothing compared with the absolute wrong done and the
+discredit it has brought, both here and in Europe, upon the national name.
+
+T. W. HIGGINSON,
+
+Late Col. 1st S. C. Vols. (now 33d U. S. C. T.)
+NEWPORT, R. I,
+December 8, 1864.
+
+
+
+PETITION
+
+"To the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the United
+States in Congress assembled:
+
+"The undersigned respecfully petitions for the repeal of so much of
+Section IV. of the Act of Congress making appropriations for the army
+and approved July 4, 1864, as makes a distinction, in respect to pay
+due, between those colored soldiers who were free on or before April 19,
+1861, and those who were not free until a later date;
+
+"Or at least that there may be such legislation as to secure the
+fulfillment of pledges of full pay from date of enlistment, made by
+direct authority of the War Department to the colored soldiers of South
+Carolina, on the faith of which pledges they enlisted.
+
+"THOMAS WENTWORTH HIGGINSON, Late Colonel 1st S. C. Vols. (now 33d U.
+S. C. Vols.)
+
+"NEWPORT, R. L, December 9, 1864."
+
+
+
+
+Appendix E
+Farewell Address
+of Lt. Col. Trowbridge
+
+
+HEADQUARTERS 33o
+UNITED STATES COLORED TROOPS,
+LATE IST SOUTH CAROLINA VOLUNTEERS,
+
+MORRIS ISLAND, S. C.,
+
+February 9, 1866. GENERAL ORDERS, No. 1.
+
+COMRADES,--The hour is at hand when we must separate forever, and nothing
+can ever take from us the pride we feel, when we look back upon the
+history of the First South Carolina Volunteers,--the first black regiment
+that ever bore arms in defence of freedom on the continent of America.
+
+On the ninth day of May, 1862, at which time there were nearly four
+millions of your race in a bondage sanctioned by the laws of the land,
+and protected by our flag,--on that day, in the face of floods of
+prejudice, that wellnigh deluged every avenue to manhood and true
+liberty, you came forth to do battle for your country and your
+kindred. For long and weary months without pay, or even the privilege
+of being recognized as soldiers, you labored on, only to be disbanded
+and sent to your homes, without even a hope of reward. And when our
+country, necessitated by the deadly struggle with armed traitors,
+finally granted you the opportunity _again_ to come forth in defence
+of the nation's life, the alacrity with which you responded to the
+call gave abundant evidence of your readiness to strike a manly blow
+for the liberty of your race. And from that little band of hopeful,
+trusting, and brave men, who gathered at Camp Saxton, on Port Royal
+Island, in the fall of 1862, amidst the terrible prejudices that then
+surrounded us, has grown an army of a hundred and forty thousand black
+soldiers, whose valor and heroism has won for your race a name which
+will live as long as the undying pages of history shall endure; and by
+whose efforts, united with those of the white man, armed rebellion has
+been conquered, the millions of bondmen have been emancipated, and the
+fundamental law of the land has been so altered as to remove forever
+the possibility of human slavery being re-established within the
+borders of redeemed America. The flag of our fathers, restored to its
+rightful significance, now floats over every foot of our territory,
+from Maine to California, and beholds only freemen! The prejudices
+which formerly existed against you are wellnigh rooted out
+
+Soldiers, you have done your duty, and acquitted yourselves like men,
+who, actuated by such ennobling motives, could not fail; and as the
+result of your fidelity and obedience, you have won your freedom. And O,
+how great the reward!
+
+It seems fitting to me that the last hours of our existence as a
+regiment should be passed amidst the unmarked graves of your
+comrades,--at Fort Wagner. Near you rest the bones of Colonel Shaw,
+buried by an enemy's hand, in the same grave with his black soldiers,
+who fell at his side; where, in future, your children's children will
+come on pilgrimages to do homage to the ashes of those that fell in this
+glorious struggle.
+
+The flag which was presented to us by the Rev. George B. Cheever and his
+congregation, of New York City, on the first of January, 1863,--the day
+when Lincoln's immortal proclamation of freedom was given to the
+world,--and which you have borne so nobly through the war, is now to be
+rolled up forever, and deposited in our nation's capital. And while
+there it shall rest, with the battles in which you have participated
+inscribed upon its folds, it will be a source of pride to us all to
+remember that it has never been disgraced by a cowardly faltering in the
+hour of danger or polluted by a traitor's touch.
+
+Now that you are to lay aside your arms, and return to the peaceful
+avocations of life, I adjure you, by the associations and history of
+the past, and the love you bear for your liberties, to harbor no
+feelings of hatred toward your former masters, but to seek in the
+paths of honesty, virture, sobriety, and industry, and by a willing
+obedience to the laws of the land, to grow up to the full stature of
+American citizens. The church, the school-house, and the right forever
+to be free are now secured to you, and every prospect before you is
+full of hope and encouragement. The nation guarantees to you full
+protection and justice, and will require from you in return the
+respect for the laws and orderly deportment which will prove to every
+one your right to all the privileges of freemen.
+
+To the officers of the regiment I would say, your toils are ended, your
+mission is fulfilled, and we separate forever. The fidelity, patience,
+and patriotism with which you have discharged your duties, to your men
+and to your country, entitle you to a far higher tribute than any words
+of thankfulness which I can give you from the bottom of my heart You
+will find your reward in the proud conviction that the cause for which
+you have battled so nobly has been crowned with abundant success.
+
+Officers and soldiers of the Thirty-Third United States Colored Troops,
+once the First South Carolina Volunteers, I bid you all farewell!
+
+By order of Lt.-Col. C. T. TROWBRIDGE, commanding Regiment
+
+E. W. HYDE, Lieutenant and Acting Adjutant.
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+[page numbers have been retained for the W. W. Norton paperback
+reprint to show relative location in file.]
+
+
+Index
+
+Aiken, William, GOT., 166
+
+Aiken, South Carolina, 249
+
+Allston, Adam, Corp., 103
+
+Andrew, J. A., Gov., 29, 215, 216,
+sends Emancipation Proclamation to Higginson, 85
+
+Bates, Edward, 275
+
+Battle of the Hundred Pines, 95, 104
+
+Beach, H. A., Lt, 257, 258
+
+Beaufort, South Carolina, 33, 34,
+38, 106, 142, 215 Higginson visits, 64 Negro troops march through, 74
+picket station near, 134 residents visit camp, 147 Negro troops patrol, 219
+
+Beauregard, P. G .T., Gen., 45, 73
+
+Beecher, H. R., Rev., 241
+
+Bell, Louis, Col., 225
+
+Bennett, W. T., Gen., 249, 255
+
+Bezzard, James, 95
+
+Bigelow, L. F., Lt, 28
+
+Billings, L., Lt.-Col., 255
+
+Bingham, J. M., Lt, 170, 257
+
+Brannan, J. M, Gen., 107
+
+Brisbane, W. H., 60
+
+Bronson, William, Sgt, 260
+
+Brown, A. B., Lt, 258
+
+Brown, John, 29, 45, 61, 76
+
+Brown, John (Negro), 262
+
+Brown, York, 262 Bryant, J. E., Capt, 220
+
+Budd, Lt, 83
+
+Burnside, A. E., Gen., 54, 55
+
+Butler, B. F., Gen., 27
+
+Calhoun, J. C., Capt., 150 Camplife, 30
+evening activities, 36-39, 44-49 Casualties, 89
+
+Chamberlin, G. B., Lt., 177, 257 Chamberlin, Mrs., 229
+
+Charleston, South Carolina, attacked, 137, 143, 150
+ Negro troops in, 249 Charleston and Savannah Railway,
+163
+
+Cheever, G. B., Rev., 278
+
+Child, A. Lt, 258
+
+Christmas, 55, 56
+
+Clark, Capt, 84, 89, 102
+
+Clifton, Capt, 100, 101
+
+Clinton, J. B., Lt, 165
+
+Colors, Stands of, 56, 60
+
+Confederates, 35
+use spies, 91, 93
+attack Negro troops, 86-87, 100-102
+threaten to burn Jacksonville, 110
+civilians fear Negro troops, 116
+retreat, 126-127,142
+
+Connecticut Regiment, Sixth, 122,
+124, 126 Seventh, 93
+
+Corwin, B. R., MaJ., 120, 126
+
+CrandaU, W. B., Surg., 255
+
+Crum, Simon, Corp., 249
+
+Cushman, James, 241
+
+Danilson, W. H., Maj., 93, 256,
+
+Davis, C. I., Lt., 257
+
+Davis., R. M., Lt., 259
+
+Davis, W. W. H., Gen., 164
+
+Department of the South, 15, 80
+quiet, 106
+colored troops in, 137
+
+Desertions, 62
+
+Dewhurst, G. W., Adjt, 256
+
+Dewhurst, Mrs., 229
+
+Discipline, need for, 29
+Negroes accept, 39
+
+Dolly, George, Capt., 172, 256
+
+Doolittle, J. R., 271
+
+Drill, of Negroes, 46, 51, 245
+whites, 64-65
+
+Drinking, absence of, 58
+
+Duncan, Lt. Com., 109, 111
+
+Dupont, S. F., Admiral, 15, 82, 91,
+99, 108, 137
+
+Dutch, Capt., 166
+
+Edisto expedition, 163-176, 214
+
+Education, desire for, 48
+
+Emancipation Proclamation, 65
+read, 60 sent to Higginson, 85
+
+Fernandina, Florida, 84, 91, 104
+
+Fessenden, W. P., 271, 272
+
+Finnegan, Gen., 115
+
+Fisher, J., Lt., 257
+
+Florida, 221
+men under Higginson, 35
+slaves know about Lincoln, 46
+refugees from, 49 Foraging, 99, 104, 117, 120
+restraint in, 96-97
+in Florida, 221
+
+Fowler, J. H., Chap., 59, 119, 221,
+
+Fremont, J. C., Gen., 46, 61
+
+French, J., Rev., 60, 123
+
+Furman, J. T., Lt, 258
+
+Gage, F. D., Mrs., 61
+
+Garrison, W. L., 236
+
+Gaston, William, Lt., 257
+
+Gilmore, Q. A., Gen., 176, 224,
+226, 228
+writes on Charleston, 163
+approves Edisto expedition, 164
+
+Goldsborough, Commodore, 231,
+
+Goodell, J. B., Lt., 28
+
+Goodrich, F. S., Lt., 258, 259
+
+Gould, E. Corp., 261
+
+Gould, F. M., Lt, 258
+
+Greeley, Horace, 164
+
+Greene, Sgt, 125
+
+Hallett, Capt, 80, 81, 261
+
+Hallowell, E. N., Gen., 216, 230,
+
+Hamburg, South Carolina, 249
+
+Hartwell, A. S., Gen., 272
+
+Hawks, J. M., Surg., 256
+
+Hawley, J. R., Gen., 93,102,114
+
+Hayne, H. E., Sgt., 249
+
+Hazard, Miles, 262
+
+Heasley, A, Capt., 220, 256
+
+Heron, Charles, 126
+
+Hilton Head, 32
+Higginson visits, 106
+troops on duty at, 214
+
+Hinton, R. J., Col., 264
+
+Holden, Lt, 126
+
+Hooper, C. W., Capt., 154, 226, 256, 257, 258
+
+Hospital, camp, 56, 63
+
+Howard University, 250
+
+Hughes, Lt. Com., 91, 93, 94
+
+Hunter, David., Gen.-28, 35, 40, 62, 80, 124, 130, 131,
+138, 164, 260, 261, 263
+takes Negro sgt to N.Y., 73
+visits camp, 76
+speaks to Negro troops, 76
+Higginson confers with, 106
+orders evacuation of Jacksonville, 107
+attacks Charleston, 137
+goes North, 150
+
+Hyde, E. W., Lt, 258, 259, 279
+
+Hyde, W. H., Lt, 89, 257
+
+Jackson, A. W., Capt, 87, 89, 256, 257, 258
+
+Jacksonville, Florida
+Confederates threaten to burn, 110
+Higginson's men reach, 112-113
+description of, 114-115
+order to evacuate, 130
+attempts to bum, 130-131
+
+James, William, Capt., 96,165,256
+
+Jekyll Island, 83
+
+Johnston, J. F., Lt, 257
+
+Jones, Lt., 89
+
+Kansas, 29, 43, 64
+
+Kemble, Fanny, 82, 261
+
+Kennon, Clarence, Cpl., 262
+
+King, T. B., 82
+
+Lambkin, Prince, Cpl., 45, 116
+
+Leslie's Illustrated Weekly, 56
+
+Lincoln, Abraham, 46, 238
+
+London Spectator, 76
+
+Long, Thomas, CpL, 240
+
+Mclntyre, H., Sgt., 85, 86, 239
+
+Maine, 43
+
+Maine Regiment, Eighth, 75, 123, 124, 126
+
+Manning, B. H., Lt, 259
+
+Maroons, 235, 237
+
+Massachusetts Regiment,
+First, 139
+Fifty-Fourth, 27, 215, 232
+
+Meeker, L., Maj., 122, 126
+
+Merriam, E. C., Capt, 256, 257
+
+Metcalf, L. W., Capt, 85, 87, 96, 220, 256
+
+Miller family, 234
+
+Minor, T. T, Surg., 87, 256
+
+Mitchell, O. M., Gen., 263
+
+Montgomery, James, Col., 114, 120, 130, 264
+enters Jacksonville, 112
+river raid led by, 120, 129, 164
+
+Moses, Acting Master, 83
+
+Mulattoes, 33, 42, 234
+pass for white, 49-50
+
+Music, troops play, 47, 187-213
+
+Negro soldiers visited, 30 work at night, 38-39 as sentinels, 42, 66-69
+honor and fidelity, 66 march to Beaufort, 74-75 conduct under fire,
+86-87, 100-101, 128-129
+treatment of whites by, 116 on picket duty, 133 on raid up Edisto,
+167-176 appraisal of, 231-247 from North and South compared,
+
+Negro spirituals, 187-213
+
+Negroes, traits of, 66, 69-71 physical
+condition of, 72, 246 set free by Higginson's men,
+166-169
+
+New Hampshire Regiment, Fourth, 139, 225
+
+New Year's celebration, 55, 56, 57-61
+
+New York, 34
+Officers, white, 51
+
+O'Neil, J. B., Lt., 257
+
+Osborne, Lt., 220
+
+Parker, C. E., Lt., 257
+
+Parker, N. B., Capt., 256, 257, 258
+
+Parsons, William, 89
+
+Phillips, Wendell, 118, 236
+
+Pomeroy, J., Lt, 257
+
+Port Royal, 82, 83, 124
+capture of, 164
+as winter camp, 177
+new camp at, 215
+objective of Sherman, 247
+
+Ramsay, Allan, 209
+
+Randolph, W. J., Capt, 120,
+256
+
+Rebels. See Confederates Religious activities, 47, 48, 240-241
+
+Rivers, Prince, Sgt., 61,75,245,249
+qualities of, 73, 78
+plants colors, 99
+
+Robbins, E. W., Capt, 256, 257,
+
+Roberts, Samuel, 231
+
+Rogers, J. S., Capt, 103, 173, 250, 256
+
+Rogers, Seth, Surg., 89, 103, 255
+
+Rust, J. D., Col., 124, 125,126,131
+
+Sammis, Col., 49
+
+St. Simon's Island, 83, 84
+
+Sampson, W. W., Capt, 170, 256,
+
+Savannah, Georgia, 115, 249
+
+Saxton, M. W., Lt., 258
+
+Saxton, Rufus, Gen., 29, 55, 58, 59, 61,70,76,80,88,102,108,
+143, 164, 216, 224, 225, 229, 232, 235, 261, 263, 267, 269,
+270, 273 offers command to Higginson, 78
+Higginson reports to, 33 issues proclamation, 34 receives recruits,
+40 speaks on New Year's program,
+Negroes idolize, 66 speaks to troops, 76 initiates plans for Shaw
+monument, 217
+Christmas party, 219
+
+Searles, J. M., Lt., 259
+
+Sears, Capt., 94
+
+Selvage, J. M., Lt, 258
+
+Serrell, E. W., Col., 260
+
+Seward, W. H., 238
+
+Seymour, T., Gen., 132, 228
+
+Shaw, R. G., Col., 170, 264, 278
+camp named for, 215
+Higginson meets, 216 killed, 217
+
+Sherman, W. T., Gen., 170, 247
+
+Showalter, Lt.-Col, 128
+
+"Siege of Charleston," 163
+
+Simmons, London, Cpl., 245
+
+Slavery, effect of, 38, 244
+
+Smalls, Robert, Capt, 33, 80
+
+Songs, Negro, 136, 187-213
+
+South Carolina, 29 men under Higginson, 35, 40 man reads
+Emancipation Proclamation,
+59-60
+
+South Carolina Volunteers, First, 27, 237
+order to Florida countermanded, 225
+becomes Thirty-third U.S. Colored Troops, 248 South Carolina Volunteers,
+Second, 27, 126, 264
+
+Sprague, A. B. R., Col., 28
+
+Stafford, Col., 264
+
+Stanton, E. M., 266
+
+Steedman, Capt, 130
+
+Stevens, Capt, 83
+
+Stevens, Thaddeus, 272, 273
+
+Stickney, Judge, 61, 106, 114
+
+Stockdale, W, Lt, 257
+
+Stone, H. A., Lt, 257
+
+Strong, J. D., Lt.-Col., 80, 121,
+126, 172, 174, 175, 255
+
+Stuard, E. S., Surg., 256
+
+Sumner, Charles, 268
+
+Sunderland, Col., 113
+
+Sutton, Robert, Sgt, 61, 88, 94, 95, 188
+character of, 78-79
+leads men, 85-86
+wounded, 90
+exhibits slave jail, 97-98
+court-martialed, 104
+
+Thibadeau, J. H., Capt, 257
+
+Thompson, J. M., Capt, 256, 257
+
+Tirrell, A. H., Lt, 258
+
+Tobacco, use of, 58
+
+Tonking, J. H., Capt, 256
+
+Trowbridge, C. T., Lt-Col., 164, 167, 169, 175, 226,
+231, 235, 243, 245, 249, 255, 256,
+260, 262, 263, 272, 277-279 commands "Planter," 80,103 and men construct
+Ft Montgomery, 121 on river raid, 165
+
+Trowbridge, J. A., Lt, 257, 258
+
+Tubman, Harriet 37 TwicheU, J. F., Lt-CoL, 123, 126
+Virginia
+
+Vendross, Robert, Cpl., 249
+
+Walker, G. D., Capt, 257
+
+Walker, William, Sgt., 267, 274
+
+War Department, 40, 93
+
+Washington, William, 44
+
+Watson, Lt., 109
+
+Webster, Daniel, 27
+
+Weld, S. M., 216
+
+West, H. C., Lt, 258
+
+West, J. B., Lt, 257, 258
+
+White, E. P., Lt, 257
+
+White, N. S, Capt, 256, 258, 259
+
+Whiting, William, 269, 270, 274,
+275
+
+Whitney, H. A., Maj, 170, 220, 255, 256
+
+Wiggins, Cyrus, 250
+
+Williams, Harry, Sgt., 220
+
+Williams, Col., 264
+
+Wilson, Henry, 268, 271
+
+Wilson family, 233
+
+Wood, H., Lt, 258, 25?
+
+Wood, W. J., Maj., 267
+
+Woodstock, Georgia, 95
+
+Wright, Gen., 107, 112
+
+Wright, Fanny, 234
+
+Yellow Fever, fear of, 74
+
+Zachos, Dr., 41
+
+
+
+
+
+
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