登陆注册
15709400000228

第228章

Price had been driven out of Missouri into Arkansas by General Curtis, acting under General Halleck's orders. The chief body of the Confederate army in the West had abandoned the fortified position which they had long held at Bowling Green, in the southwestern district of Kentucky. Roanoke Island, on the coast of North Carolina, had been taken by General Burnside's expedition, and a belief had begun to manifest itself in Washington that the army of the Potomac was really about to advance. It is impossible to explain in what way the renewed confidence of the Northern party showed itself, or how one learned that the hopes of the secessionists were waxing dim; but it was so; and even a stranger became aware of the general feeling as clearly as though it were a defined and established fact. In the early part of the winter, when I reached Washington, the feeling ran all the other way. Northern men did not say that they were despondent; they did not with spoken words express diffidence as to their success; but their looks betrayed diffidence, and the moderation of their self-assurance almost amounted to despondency. In the capital the parties were very much divided. The old inhabitants were either secessionists or influenced by "secession proclivities," as the word went; but the men of the government and of the two Houses of Congress were, with a few exceptions, of course Northern. It should be understood that these parties were at variance with each other on almost every point as to which men can disagree. In our civil war it may be presumed that all Englishmen were at any rate anxious for England. They desired and fought for different modes of government; but each party was equally English in its ambition. In the States there is the hatred of a different nationality added to the rancor of different politics. The Southerners desire to be a people of themselves--to divide themselves by every possible mark of division from New England; to be as little akin to New York as they are to London, or, if possible, less so. Their habits, they say, are different; their education, their beliefs, their propensities, their very virtues and vices are not the education, or the beliefs, or the propensities, or the virtues and vices of the North. The bond that ties them to the North is to them a Mezentian marriage, and they hate their Northern spouses with a Mezentian hatred. They would be anything sooner than citizens of the United States. They see to what Mexico has come, and the republics of Central America; but the prospect of even that degradation is less bitter to them than a share in the glory of the stars and stripes. Better, with them, to reign in hell than serve in heaven! It is not only in politics that they will be beaten, if they be beaten, as one party with us may be beaten by another; but they will be beaten as we should be beaten if France annexed us, and directed that we should live under French rule. Let an Englishman digest and realize that idea, and he will comprehend the feelings of a Southern gentleman as he contemplates the probability that his State will be brought back into the Union. And the Northern feeling is as strong. The Northern man has founded his national ambition on the territorial greatness of his nation. He has panted for new lands, and for still extended boundaries. The Western World has opened her arms to him, and has seemed to welcome him as her only lord. British America has tempted him toward the north, and Mexico has been as a prey to him on the south. He has made maps of his empire, including all the continent, and has preached the Monroe doctrine as though it had been decreed by the gods. He has told the world of his increasing millions, and has never yet known his store to diminish. He has pawed in the valley, and rejoiced in his strength. He has said among the trumpets, ha! ha! He has boasted aloud in his pride, and called on all men to look at his glory. And now shall he be divided and shorn? Shall he be hemmed in from his ocean, and shut off from his rivers? Shall he have a hook run into his nostrils, and a thorn driven into his jaw? Shall men say that his day is over, when he has hardly yet tasted the full cup of his success? Has his young life been a dream, and not a truth? Shall he never reach that giant manhood which the growth of his boyish years has promised him? If the South goes from him, he will be divided, shorn, and hemmed in. The hook will have pierced his nose, and the thorn will fester in his jaw. Men will taunt him with his former boastings, and he will awake to find himself but a mortal among mortals.

Such is the light in which the struggle is regarded by the two parties, and such the hopes and feelings which have been engendered.

It may therefore be surmised with what amount of neighborly love secessionists and Northern neighbors regarded each other in such towns as Baltimore and Washington. Of course there was hatred of the deepest dye; of course there were muttered curses, or curses which sometimes were not simply muttered. Of course there was wretchedness, heart-burnings, and fearful divisions in families.

That, perhaps, was the worst of all. The daughter's husband would be in the Northern ranks, while the son was fighting in the South;or two sons would hold equal rank in the two armies, sometimes sending to each other frightful threats of personal vengeance. Old friends would meet each other in the street, passing without speaking; or, worse still, would utter words of insult for which payment is to be demanded when a Southern gentleman may again be allowed to quarrel in his own defense.

And yet society went on. Women still smiled, and men were happy to whom such smiles were given. Cakes and ale were going, and ginger was still hot in the mouth. When many were together no words of unhappiness were heard. It was at those small meetings of two or three that women would weep instead of smiling, and that men would run their hands through their hair and sit in silence, thinking of their ruined hopes and divided children.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 主宰武极

    主宰武极

    现实中失败的少年,穿越后成为小镇上一家势力的少主,一心想保护家人的他,因一次神秘奇遇,开始修真之路,当洒尽汗水,在敌人的追杀中,脚踏真龙,王者归来,成为武极大陆的最强者,主宰武极!
  • 丹尼的死亡奇遇记

    丹尼的死亡奇遇记

    魔幻现实主义文学,讲述一名少年追求爱与真理的故事
  • 凤羽玄修

    凤羽玄修

    凤凰出世,浴火焚身,看八岁少年,如何驾凤而行......
  • 四叶草的心

    四叶草的心

    这是一本浪漫小说,本故事纯属虚构,请不要怀疑,第一次写小说有点小紧张哈,谢谢大家支持~\(≧▽≦)/~
  • 有些事现在不做,一辈子都不会做了3:一个人的生活

    有些事现在不做,一辈子都不会做了3:一个人的生活

    《有些事现在不做,一辈子都不会做了3——一个人的生活》这本书继续提倡“只需去做,生活就会改变”,提供给大家的是一个人生活的建议,提供一些一个人平时想不到,或者想到了却一直没有去做的事情。告诉一个人生活,怎么去做这些事,或者去哪里可以做到。这本书讲到的也不是多么惊天动地的大事,有的只是生活中触手可及的一个人的小事。但是,生活并不是由大事组成的。这些事,并不枯燥,认真看,每一个都非常有意思,如果这一件又一件的小事都去做了,生活的质量就变了。一个人的生活,不仅仅是一种生活概念,还是一种环保概念。这种意识会让你更有责任感,进而影响你整个生活方式、态度和处事哲学。一个人的生活,我们也有很多憧憬和未来。
  • 杀手穿越之死神宫主

    杀手穿越之死神宫主

    她,从前杀人不眨眼,却穿越成了弱女子,依旧是淡淡的,哪怕天塌下来她也不怕。前世独创杀手宫殿;今生一手支撑一门派一手掌控一国人。妹妹雇杀手,看我的哥哥们。妹妹踢我出家,我自己走,你不惹我还好,我可很记仇。谁信一个小女孩闯江湖?偏偏她就是!紫冰宫圣女,招人追杀?没事,她就有一个杀神大哥;武林会上当场羞辱别人招杀害?没事,她还有个死神丈夫死不了!
  • 咸土部落轶事之没有绿色的日子

    咸土部落轶事之没有绿色的日子

    一名盐场的文学青年为了追求梦寐以求的情人,勇敢地迈入了充满传奇色彩的成功之路,但功成名就的他却只能品尝孤寂的痛苦。
  • 爱神成长日记

    爱神成长日记

    故事比较坑爹。简介就不写了(捂脸)。希望大家支持作者文文。多提宝贵的写作意见
  • 龙剑神皇

    龙剑神皇

    灵天之界,龙为首;万灵之地,神为王;既然天要侮我,吾便手执天龙之剑,逆天而行,天欲亡我,我便灭天。