登陆注册
15709400000160

第160章

When I first made inquiry on the subject, I was told that Mount Vernon at that time was not to be reached; that though it was not in the hands of the rebels, neither was it in the hands of Northerners, and that therefore strangers could not go there; but this, though it was told to me and others by those who should have known the facts, was not the case. I had gone down the river with a party of ladies, and we were opposite to Mount Vernon; but on that occasion we were assured we could not land. The rebels, we were told, would certainly seize the ladies, and carry them off into Secessia. On hearing which, the ladies were of course doubly anxious to be landed. But our stern commander, for we were on a government boat, would not listen to their prayers, but carried us instead on board the "Pensacola," a sloop-of-war which was now lying in the river, ready to go to sea, and ready also to run the gantlet of the rebel batteries which lined the Virginian shore of the river for many miles down below Alexandria and Mount Vernon. A sloop-of-war in these days means a large man-of-war, the guns of which are so big that they only stand on one deck, whereas a frigate would have them on two decks, and a line-of-battle ship on three. Of line-of-battle ships there will, I suppose, soon be none, as the "Warrior" is only a frigate. We went over the "Pensacola," and I must say she was very nice, pretty, and clean. I have always found American sailors on their men-of-war to be clean and nice looking--as much so Ishould say as our own; but nothing can be dirtier, more untidy, or apparently more ill preserved than all the appurtenances of their soldiers.

We landed also on this occasion at Alexandria, and saw as melancholy and miserable a town as the mind of man can conceive. Its ordinary male population, counting by the voters, is 1500, and of these 700were in the Southern army. The place had been made a hospital for Northern soldiers, and no doubt the site for that purpose had been well chosen. But let any woman imagine what would be the feelings of her life while living in a town used as a hospital for the enemies against whom her absent husband was then fighting. Her own man would be away--ill, wounded, dying, for what she knew, without the comfort of any hospital attendance, without physic, with no one to comfort him; but those she hated with a hatred much keener than his were close to her hand, using some friend's house that had been forcibly taken, crawling out into the sun under her eyes, taking the bread from her mouth! Life in Alexandria at this time must have been sad enough. The people were all secessionists, but the town was held by the Northern party. Through the lines, into Virginia, they could not go at all. Up to Washington they could not go without a military pass, not to be obtained without some cause given. All trade was at an end. In no town at that time was trade very flourishing; but here it was killed altogether--except that absolutely necessary trade of bread. Who would buy boots or coats, or want new saddles, or waste money on books, in such days as these, in such a town as Alexandria? And then out of 1500 men, one-half had gone to fight the Southern battles! Among the women of Alexandria secession would have found but few opponents.

It was here that a hot-brained young man, named Ellsworth, was killed in the early days of the rebellion. He was a colonel in the Northern volunteer army, and on entering Alexandria found a secession flag flying at the chief hotel. Instead of sending up a corporal's guard to remove it, he rushed up and pulled it down with his own hand. As he descended, the landlord shot him dead, and one of his soldier's shot the landlord dead. It was a pity that so brave a lad, who had risen so high, should fall so vainly; but they have made a hero of him in America; have inscribed his name on marble monuments, and counted him up among their great men. In all this their mistake is very great. It is bad for a country to have no names worthy of monumental brass; but it is worse for a country to have monumental brasses covered with names which have never been made worthy of such honor. Ellsworth had shown himself to be brave and foolish. Let his folly be pardoned on the score of his courage, and there, I think, should have been an end of it.

I found afterward that Mount Vernon was accessible, and I rode thither with some officers of the staff of General Heintzelman, whose outside pickets were stationed beyond the old place. Icertainly should not have been well pleased had I been forced to leave the country without seeing the house in which Washington had lived and died. Till lately this place was owned and inhabited by one of the family, a Washington, descended from a brother of the general's; but it has now become the property of the country, under the auspices of Mr. Everett, by whose exertions was raised the money with which it was purchased. It is a long house, of two stories, built, I think, chiefly of wood, with a veranda, or rather long portico, attached to the front, which looks upon the river. There are two wings, or sets of outhouses, containing the kitchen and servants' rooms, which were joined by open wooden verandas to the main building; but one of these verandas has gone, under the influence of years. By these a semicircular sweep is formed before the front door, which opens away from the river, and toward the old prim gardens, in which, we were told, General Washington used to take much delight. There is nothing very special about the house.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 大隋将军

    大隋将军

    大隋第一勇士穿越虚空,混迹都市,且看李元霸逆天改命掀起古武风暴,称霸无尽星空
  • 我是教练第一部

    我是教练第一部

    从英国到中国杨乐为了成为足球教练赌上一切从校园到女足杨乐拿到属于他的第一份荣耀从临危受命到亚洲冠军杨乐将率领最弱之队接受一切挑战邂逅穆里尼奥会迎来何种机遇?中国教练又将以何种方式前往国米?百年豪门为何会一病不起?杨乐又将如何逆境翻盘?对不起,我是教练,这个比赛我要赢!
  • 如果世界没有悲伤

    如果世界没有悲伤

    悲伤,为什么我总是逃脱不了你的手中,为什么?悲伤,你要我做你的女人,我做了!你要我当你的秘书,我当了!你要我为你生孩子,好!这是我欠你的,我还!可是,为什么,我的心,爱你的心,都被你狠狠地抛弃!为什么?如果可以,我希望,这世界没有悲伤……
  • 去夏正好

    去夏正好

    她是一位名副其实的“童颜阿姨”,富可敌国却屡遭感情打击,身患抑郁症的她想在平凡的市民生活中疗伤,熟料却一头撞进难分难解的忘年恋之网,这个二十几岁的男孩子怎么这么难缠?各路神佛,我不要再受一次伤;老天,放过阿姨吧。。。。。。
  • 异界全战

    异界全战

    千军万马不顶我的长枪方阵。已经修改完毕,慢慢的上传。最近很忙很忙。但是我还是那句话,我不太监。当然,疲软我不保证,但是会慢慢写下去,哪怕用几年的时间诸位来到请收藏一下,养肥了就好了
  • 暗黑狂徒

    暗黑狂徒

    光明不一定代表正义!黑暗不一定代表邪恶!怀有先天暗元素的他,被世界憎恨着,遭到世人疯狂追杀,在逆袭的过程中,无意中看见会走路的炸弹、十条尾巴的女人、能在天上飞的怪鱼,还有……未知的世界。
  • 搜神录

    搜神录

    本书不仅仅是你想象中的鬼故事那么简单!它是一部集奇闻轶事、神异鬼怪、山川河流、民间趣事、历史趣事、外国故事的民俗大全。旨在扬善驱恶引导思想,又可增加看官们闲谈材料,丰富你们的生活...
  • 中国哲学史

    中国哲学史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 中国远征军(下)

    中国远征军(下)

    中国青年学生在二战期间,跨国征战,抗击日寇,以血肉之躯保卫战时中国国际运输线的重大历史事件。故事展现了中国远征军从出征,失败到大反攻的艰苦卓越的全过程,其中穿插了中、美、英青年军人的战斗友谊和爱情生活,显现了二战中史迪威、孙立人、戴安澜等一大批中外将领的个性和风采。
  • 异界穿越现代

    异界穿越现代

    我本是一名修真界修炼者,为红颜我却意外穿越,这是上天安排吗?“我来到的世界名为现代。”