登陆注册
26524100000228

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
  • 摇椅边的心灵盛宴(听外婆讲那些人生的智慧)

    摇椅边的心灵盛宴(听外婆讲那些人生的智慧)

    《摇椅边的心灵盛宴——听外婆讲那些人生的智慧》一书以月份为单位,分十二部分,内容涉及广泛,不论是寓言、传说,还是名家趣事、邻里小事,应有尽有。本书文字清新、说理透彻,又毫无堆砌累赘之感,每个故事都是一道心灵大餐,每个哲理都是一盏人生明灯,在我们为孩子呈现的这桌心灵盛宴上,相信不管是大人还是孩子,都能找到自己想要的那份感动和充实。”小船儿摇,摇到外婆桥,外婆夸我是好宝宝,大姑子,小舅子,年糕里藏着一粒大枣子……“回荡的童谣中,我们从未走远,因为那是生命的吟唱,那是一种无穷的力量,在黑暗中生生不息,源远流长。
  • 转校遇男神:我的承诺

    转校遇男神:我的承诺

    转校,谁喜欢?因为转校丢了多少爱情和友情?但也是因为转校,开始了一段新的爱情。
  • 浴火的文明

    浴火的文明

    亿万年的自然变迁,造就了我们灿烂的世界。从钻木取火到核能时代,从结绳记事到大数据,从嫦娥奔月到阿波罗1号,从神话到现实……七八千年的智慧积累,创造辉煌的文明时代。一次意外的地外文明接触,给地球文明带来了灭顶之灾……林逸,22世纪最伟大的科学家,命运让他来到了21世纪初,这一世他能否带领人类摆脱灭绝的命运,挽救地球文明,地球文明可否浴火重生,又能否在浩瀚的宇宙文明中永垂不朽……
  • 镇苍宇

    镇苍宇

    谁说阴阳不可同修?谁说身怀阴阳就是废材?刘宇意外穿越到了吴宇大陆,进入这个元素的世界,这个世界的等级共分为纳灵境、聚灵境、通灵境、灵海境、元素境五种,但刘宇的出现让这个安静的世界不再安静,让元素境的强者不再是最强。征途,就从镇苍宇出发。
  • 北朝古事记

    北朝古事记

    于轲盘坐在断义山山崖之上,身后插着一杆大旗,旗后跪伏一百零八狂魔,冷甲铁面,长枪林立如狰狞的钢铁荆棘。面甲里藏着的赤目和压抑的喘息声让气氛有些凝固。他们有些激动,还有些恐惧。前方,悬崖对面有箫王的十万神将,金色的铠甲和华丽的战刀上反射的光把天空染得熏黄。箫王如神王一般在众军前长身而立,身影有着斩铁般的锋利。他身后,十万银甲闪烁着令人窒息的寒光,西天乌云上漏下的一缕阳光如游蛇般在银甲军团里急速游动,反射出的银光和熏黄的天空相对。悬崖下,箫王的十万水师在崖底的暗流放下沉重的铁锚。今天,他们退无可退了。
  • 落难公主倾世妃

    落难公主倾世妃

    她本是公主,倾世之态,倾城之姿,却因宫闱权谋,落难民间,从此身背血海深仇。他是她冲喜的夫君,他与她拜过高堂却又注定此生无缘,她是他争夺皇位的棋子,温润如玉的帝裔;英运筹帷幄的一代枭雄;桀骜不驯俊美如玉的公子;相貌出众气宇轩昂的少年天子;她的心究竟归于何处?
  • 钢铁侠之拯救瓦罗兰

    钢铁侠之拯救瓦罗兰

    大富豪托尼斯塔克穿越到了瓦洛兰大陆,为了防止虚空生物破坏瓦罗兰的和平,托尼化身救世主,与英雄们缔结契约,共同抗击敌人。然而这条路并不是一帆风顺的。托尼的命运会怎么样呢?
  • 不负时光不负你

    不负时光不负你

    韶华的年纪,每个人都期待爱情的降临,可不是每个人都那么幸运,能遇到那个愿不负时光不负他/她的人存在。如果哪天你遇到了,希望你能足够勇敢,而不是让青春消散了。只留下了白色宛如开水般的青春。
  • 手游之王者荣耀

    手游之王者荣耀

    啥?你打了好几天还是白银?那你应该进来看看,这里有如何提升到黄金的技巧!啥?你打了N小时还是黄金?那你赶紧进来看看,这里有升为铂金的秘方!啥?你熬了好几夜居然还是铂金?那你还犹豫啥,这里有提升到钻石的良药!啥?你打了无数局,现在还是钻石?那你还瞅啥,不想知道最强王者的打野技巧么!啥?你已经是最强王者了?那你还是别点进来了,因为这特么已经最强了好不......欢迎来到,手游之王者荣耀!
  • 复仇天使在都市

    复仇天使在都市

    被背叛的痛苦,身负血海深仇,改头换面的血无泪回归华夏。护美,复仇,修道。本想此生不动情,奈何气场太强,冷艳老师、美女校花、黑道大姐、、、、、、纷纷扑来,哎,美女,冷静。