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        <title><emph rend="bold">MY MANSE DURING THE WAR: </emph>
<emph>A Decade of Letters to the Rev. J. Thomas Murray, 
Editor of the Methodist Protestant:</emph>
Electronic Edition.</title>
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          <emph>Balch, Thomas  Bloomer., S. T. D.,
1793-1878</emph>
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          <titlePart type="main">MY MANSE, DURING THE WAR</titlePart>
          <titlePart type="subtitle">A Decade of Letters
<lb/>
TO THE
<lb/>
REV. J. THOMAS MURRAY,
<lb/>
<hi rend="italics">Editor of the Methodist Protestant.</hi></titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <byline>BY</byline>
        <docAuthor>T. B. Balch, S. T. D.</docAuthor>
        <docImprint><pubPlace>BALTIMORE:</pubPlace>
<publisher>PRINTED BY SHERWOOD&amp; CO.<lb/>
N. W. COR. BALTIMORE AND GAY STREETS</publisher>
<docDate>1866</docDate></docImprint>
      </titlePage>
      <div1 type="dedication">
        <head>DEDICATION.</head>
        <head>TO THE REV. DANIEL BOWERS,</head>
        <p>The following playful Letters are dedicated, as they are, because you think
them calculated in some small degree, at least, to allay that bitter sectional
feeling engendered by the disastrous war through which our country has so
recently passed. Add to this that our intercourse as Christian Ministers for
the last few has been highly agreeable to both parties.</p>
      </div1>
    </front>
    <body>
      <div1 type="text">
        <pb id="balch3" n="3"/>
        <head>MY MANSE DURING THE WAR.</head>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. I.</head>
          <p>Can my readers become interested in a Manse? Perhaps they may
if its inmates tried to maintain Christian feelings when the war was at
its cedar gates. Religion alone or something allied to it ought to appear
in a paper professedly religious. Let statesmen manage their own concerns;
but Moriah, Olivet, Tabor and Calvary belong to us who are the
ministers of good-will to our race. Isaiah says that the feet of Prophets
in his day were beautiful. Why so? Because their sandals were
adorned with pearls whenever they ascended such elevations to announce glad
tidings.</p>
          <p>My resolution was fixed to preach the Gospel, and only the Gospel,
even should the war last so long as the one between the rival Houses
of York and Lancaster, which for thirty years desolated England.
What havoc did it everywhere create? Green fields faded before it,
and moors became more dreary. Meadows and downs, lost their smiles
when a rude soldiery crushed their flowers and dispersed their flocks.
Churches too shared in the general ruin. Was not George Fox, of Leicester,
a wise man in his opposition to all war? Was not Sully, prime
minister of Henry Fourth, equally wise when he sought to bind all
Europe in a league of peace for a hundred years by way of experiment?
And what a Europe would it have been at the end of that century.
Surely Russia would have been less barbarious, and Italy would have
worn a sunnier look. The Rhine would have multiplied its grapes and
France its lilies. Swiss Cantons would have become still more pastoral,
and the fleets of England might have left their docks on errands of peaceful
discovery. But let me keep to my Hermitage.</p>
          <p>The first battle of Manassas was fought on a Sabbath. We wish that
men-at-arms would choose, some other day for their sanguinary work.
Waterloo was fought on the day of sacred rest. It might as well have
been postponed till Monday. Christians may die on Sunday, but profane
soldiers had better fix on some other time to be killed. My Hermitage
was full of refugees. Mrs. Commodore Jones, of Sharon, was one of
them, whose delicate health made her exceedingly nervous. The drama
was opened early in the morning of that brilliant day in July, 1861. A
neighbor rode by my house in great haste, with a spy-glass fastened on
his shoulder, through which to peer at the combatants. Well: if it had
been Wednesday your correspondent would have staid at home, but
being the one which was kept holy in Eden, the vale of Hebron; in
Shiloh, and by Siloa's brook  -  he took his Bible and spent the sacred
Hours between sunrise and sunset in reading of the Patriarchs, Prophets,
Apostles, Martyrs, and of Him who is Lord of all. That Bible must
<pb id="balch4" n="4"/>
be handed down to some one as an heirloom. It was presented to its
owner by the Christian ladies of Greenwich Church. Paper fine, type
capital, and well suited to the eye of a <sic corr="Septagenarian">Septuagenarian</sic>. Don't mind
these playful allusions, although they be personal. We would not possess
the ponderous vanity of La Martine for the palace of St. Cloud.
About sunset my Bible was closed. It was time for our evening meal.
In 1745 the battle of Prestorpans was fought near a Manse in the Shire
of Haddington, Scotland: and certainly one and a half a score besides
were fought near mine in the Shire of Prince William, Va. We say
nothing as to whose banner it was on which victory perched, because
then only one side would read this letter. Many a traveler knows which
way the tower of Pisa leans; but no one shall find out my leanings.
That evening the sun went down superbly beyond the Ridge, to the
azure tints to which my eye has been fondly attached for thirty years,
but the next day it rained and kept raining. Plutarch says that it
always pours down after a battle. Showers perhaps are sent in mercy
to wounded soldiers. We retired for the night after reading at the domestic
altar the lamentation of David over Jonathan, for we felt certain
that friends had fallen to rise no more till the last trump shall sound.
What is the bugle of the warrior compared to that mighty trumpet
which the arm of Gabriel alone can wield.</p>
          <p>For nearly a year after the battle of Manassas, the writer continued
to officiate to his people at a distance of three miles from the Manse.
The congregation was composed exclusively of Northern families who
had bought lands sixteen years ago in Pleasant Valley. Every Sabbath
they sent a carriage for their minister, and there could be no
kinder people. But in the confusion of the country, with three or four
exceptions, they concluded to return to the North. The last day on
which service was held was one of sadness. My text was from the
Psalms: “By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept; yea, we
wept when we remembered Zion.” And now the kirk is solitary and
none repair to its solemn feasts. We can say with the Prophet,
“Where is that flock thou hast given me  -  that beautiful flock?” Dispersed
in the whirlwind of war. For several Sabbaths many of the
Federal soldiers attended at this church and demeaned themselves
with reverence in the sanctuary. Some of them were professors of our
holy religion. The solitude of the Manse became enlivened by strangers
from Otsego Lake; the sources of the blue Juniata; the banks of
the Monongehela or the tangled prairies of, the West. Two thousand
in all though not at one and same time. They came in groups. Many
humorous and some tragic incidents took place; but the former might
be inappropriate to an ecclesiastical journal. To some of the soldiers
we presented a variety of religious tracts which were courteously
received. They promised to give them a faithful reading. Sometimes
my consort would, of a Sabbath evening, go in where they were, read
and explain a chapter in the Bible, and then kneel down and pray for
them and all whom they had left at home. They showed deep feeling.
Some of them said we will remember you in our graves; but we reckon
<pb id="balch5" n="5"/>
they must have been from Ireland. Among them were officers of
intelligence, some of whom were fresh from their respective colleges.
We could designate Col. Jones from Dartmouth and Capt. Wheeler
from New Haven, which last has been called the City of Elms. Wheeler
had left the cloisters of science for the pursuits of war, and the groves
of learning for the camp. He was quite colloquial; fond of the piano
and the zether; attended Divine service at my house; claimed to be a
collateral relative of President Edwards, and his countenance was
always arrayed in smiles. He fell at Atlanta, in Georgia, leaving a
widowed mother at New Haven, in the profoundest grief for his loss.
Major Makalone was from Philadelphia. Well read, and a Catholic.
He attended service at the Manse. My text was, “And he preached
in the synagogues of Galilee.” He was mortally wounded in the battle
of Chickamauga, when about to appear at the nuptial altar. One
heart in addition to his own was stricken into sorrow. But we cannot
designate that diversity of persons who came to my Hermitage in
shorter space than that of a decade of letters. And permit me to say,
that some of the incidents which occurred on my premises were fraught
with peculiar interest, but they will be reserved for some future time.
We must, however, allude to poor Hoskins, who fell near my farm.
He was under the command of Mosby, and the son of an Episcopal
minister in Kent county, England. He was an author, and had served
under Garibaldi, and in the Crimea under Lord Raglan. Perhaps he
was present at the storming of the Malakoff Tower. When wounded,
he was taken to the kiosk of Charles Green, adjacent to Greenwich,
who was a native of Hailes Ower, Salopshire, England, but last from
Liverpool. There he received the kindest attention; but no skill
could save his life. We laid him down in the cemetery of the village,
and his father has sent over funds to rear a neat tablet to his memory.
His steed had scoured the ruins of Italy, the margin of the Golden
Horn and Canadian snows, but he met his end among the larches of 
Prince William. In riding by our sequestered kirk we sometimes glance at the grave of the stranger in a strange land. One hot summer 
afternoon, a Mississippi soldier was brought in an ambulance to my 
house. He was very sick, and in a few days he died, not without
resignation to the Divine will; for, though young, he had been a member
of the church. Twelve of his comrades were detailed to attend
the funeral, and we buried him in a clump of cherry trees near the
gate of the Manse, the white blossoms of which have since been
sprinkled on his mound. After the second battle of Manassas, a soldier,
dangerously wounded, lay about five miles distant from my dwelling.
He had sent to the writer for some religious books, which were transmitted,
together with a Decade of Letters about Scottish Manses, by
old Peter Bell, published in a Richmond paper. We rode over to the
Swiss-looking village of Buckland to pray with the stranger, and found
him sensible, well-informed and affable. He was pale and emaciated,
but by gentle nursing he slowly regained his strength, and was then
put in a hand-carriage and moved to and fro over the yard. It is
<pb id="balch6" n="6"/>
something to be drawn by ladies for a team; but even for such a promenading,
the writer would not consent to welcome a minnie ball 
 through the shoulder. This gentleman, when recovered, went back to
Charleston, South Carolina, from which city he communicated to us the
pleasing news that he had connected himself with the people of the
Lord. Perhaps by his affliction he was led to Him who received not
one, but five wounds for our transgressions, and by whose stripes all
returning sheep are healed.</p>
          <p>But the question may be asked by my Methodist Protestant brethren
was your Manse injured by the war? No; from the last advices it is
still erect. Its bees are still riding on their chariot plants, its birds are
still twittering from its locust boughs, and its grassy knolls have not
been stained by a drop of blood. We told the knights that all their
passes-at-arms must be enacted outside of my sylvan walls, for they are
fit for nothing but to be scaled by squirrels and surmounted by wrens
or sparrows. My books are intact. We can still turn over volumes
teeming with ancient thought, or look on pictures ambrotyped from the
light of the medieval imagination. We have quaint Chaucer, cornucopian
Spencer, and can still go back to Eden with Milton for a guide.
Would that we could say the same of Ringwood, my once happy home,
which stands about five miles from my present abode. The war did it
no good, but the injury will soon be repaired. Hope so, for that spot
is associated with thirteen years of my hermit life, where morning so
often chased away the night, and evening so often drew its pensive star
from the urns of the sun. Its premises have been repeatedly sketched,
and it gratifies me to say that one of those sketches is from the pencil
of a Northern soldier. Nor could war affect its mountain views which
still range in the distance. The hues of the Ridge defy the sternest
look of the warrior, be he Taric the Moor, or  Hannibal the <sic corr="Carthaginian">Carthagenian</sic>.
The Alps regarded the tread of Napoleon, and the Pyrenees
that of Wellington no more than the footstep of a sauntering goat.
There stands those monuments of Divine power, and there will they
stand to the end of time. But one morning a train of wagons entered
my gate. What's to pay now, thought I. They had come to forage,
and a pair of officers dismounted. Major Bell was the spokesman.
Have you any oats or corn? He politely inquired. Well, Major, I replied,
we have some of both, though my farm is not much larger than
that of Cincinnatus the Roman, or of Alcibiades the Greek, and this
year have been obliged to buy. Our horses are starving was his reply.
And so are mine in the present scarcity of grain. They are so reduced
that they creep along like snails over the undulations of this county,
and they are obliged to rest under the old oak tree between this and
Greenwich kirk. You see, Major, that my home is among the pines,
and here is a burr brought me from Waterloo near Brussels. 'Tis not
so large as some of my cones. My interlocutor seemed quite willing to
prolong the colloquy. Some time since, said he, I was passing up
Georgetown, D. C., and coming to a Church my attention was struck
by a sepulchral tablet in the wall of the edifice, and it occurred to me
<pb id="balch7" n="7"/>
that the deceased person might have been a progenitor to the one of the
same name who wrote the “Picturesques” in Stockton's Christian
World. My immediate progenitor, I replied, and his father came
direct from Wales to Maryland. But where did you read the Picturesques?
In the far West, he rejoined. But have you written anything
besides, he <sic corr="continued">contined</sic>. Do you see, Major, that heap of manuscripts on
the table. They contain the history of my Times, and he who takes my
grain will find an ugly niche in that gallery. Here, to cut a long story
short, said Lieutenant Hill, suppose you write to Gen. King, under
whose orders we act. Agreed, and in ten minutes the letter was written
and sent by a soldier. When the messenger returned Lieutenant Hill
waived off the teamsters by a motion of his hand. Very much obliged
to Gen. King. He was a Milwaukee editor, but has since gone to Italy.
Hope he will experience no annoyance from the <foreign lang="it">lazzaroni</foreign> of Naples, the
cardinals of Rome, or the <foreign lang="it">banditti</foreign> of the <sic corr="Apennines">Appenines</sic>. In the evening
Major Halstead from Newark, New Jersey, who was one of Gen. Augur's
staff, rode to my house to see after the preacher. Glad to hear from his
staff, for he and the writer were well acquainted at college. The son
was taken prisoner at Cedar mountain in Culpepper, but was soon exchanged.</p>
          <p>During the blockade it was very difficult to procure pens, ink, and
paper, and this was a severe trial to a scribbler. My dilemma was
made known to Lieutenant Hill, who brought me eight quires of that
precious article letterpress. How warm were my thanks. Col. Mann
sent me up from his camp a bottle of very dingy ink, and Lieutenant
Brockway gave me a couple of pens with gutta percha holders. The
last mentioned officer was from the vale of Wyoming, but he had traveled
along the Andes. His conversation was interesting. But most
unfortunately one of the glasses of my spectacles fell out on the floor of
the Manse. A sad tribulation, comforted, however, by remembering
that Generals Taric and Kutersoff had each lost an eye. In this emergency
Dr. Donnelly, who was from Ireland, came to my house. He had
lived in Brazil where he had fallen in with the “Lusiad” of Camoens,
of which he intended to publish a new translation. He asked me about
Mikle who rendered that Epic into English. He was, I replied, the
son of a Scotch minister who preached at Langholm in Dumfrieshire.
The translator went to Lisbon on mercantile business; but afterwards
returned to Forest Hill in Oxfordshire, England, where he resided, and
where Milton was first married. Thank you, he remarked, for the
information; and on my return from the city of fraternal love you shall
own a new pair of spectacles. The doctor made good his promise, and
on his leaving us he begged my consort to remember him in her prayers.</p>
          <p>A coincidence: My son Chalmers was carried to the old Capitol; but
bearing the name of an illustrious Scotch divine, he was released in few
days and sent round to Richmond. He was moneyless, nor were his
garments white as the snow of Salmon. In Richmond a stranger whose
name was Selden, proved a friend in need. It is somewhat remarkable
that precisely on the same day and at the same hour in which Selden
<pb id="balch8" n="8"/>
was befriending <hi rend="italics">him</hi> that Selden's son, half famished, rode to my door
and asked for breakfast His appetite was keen.</p>
          <p>An editor looks askance at a long article. <foreign lang="la">Ergo</foreign>: It may be well to
close at least for the present.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. II.</head>
          <p>In a previous letter mention was made of several incidents that took
place on my premises during the war which has just been brought to a
close. It is admitted that these incidents are not sufficiently dignified
to challenge the pen of the historian, but if not of the grand and instructive
kind, they may serve at least to amuse your readers. To such
as have been already stated, suffer me to add a few more, which shall be
told in the most unpretending way. They are detailed, not to express
any political proclivities, but simply to promote the reign of good feeling;
and for this reason no offence can be given to either Jew or Gentile.
These papers may be innocently read either by proud Castilians, or by
the knights of Morocco. Garrick introduced Hannah More to the
acquaintance of John Horne. The one had written the tragedy of Douglas
and the other that of Percy, and the great actor playfully remarked,
that now the Douglas and the Percy had shaken hands, he hoped the
fight in the Cheviot Hills would be forgotten. Amen, responds the
occupant of the Prince William Manse. There is a <sic corr="sternness">sterness</sic> in the following
couplet which occurs in the Lay of the last Minstrel, quite
uncongenial to my taste:</p>
          <lg type="verse">
            <l>So long as Ettrick holds the Scott,</l>
            <l>Shall feudal war ne'er be forgot.</l>
          </lg>
          <p>It will be remembered that the Confederate army under Johnston,
lay at Centreville and Manassas during the winter of 1861 and 1862,
and some of the soldiers came to keep Christmas at my house. At such
a period of distress they could not have expected the luxuries which
used to be common at that joyful season. In olden times Christmas was
kept at Branksome Hall, or Kenilworth Castle, in a mirthful way. <sic corr="Chieftains">Chieftans</sic>
and their liegemen indulged in what is called wassail. Solders,
said I, tippling would be something very inappropriate to a Manse, but
we are not without some coffee, a berry of which Napoleon was fond.
At present it is unimportant whether it come from Mocha, Java, or Brazil,
provided it only be coffee. But have you any Louisiana sugar? said
Corporal Draper. No: but we have some West India saccharine; and
bowls of coffee are better than mugs of wine. We can trim our fires,
give you some music on the zether, which will remind us of the Tyrolese
Alps; and we can read to you Milton's hymn on the Nativity, Cowper's
Winter Evening in the Country, or the Scotch ballad called the Battle
of Bothwell Bridge, or the Braes of Yarrow, by Hamilton of Bargour.
We can furnish you with corncob pipes and send you off to beds soft as
<pb id="balch9" n="9"/>
the down of the Gothland duck. Well, for a time like this, replied the
corporal, you can do more for us than we expected. Our guests enjoyed
themselves for a few days, when they decamped from my house and
returned to their shabby tents The Manse then resumed its usual
serenity, and became just as quiet as the Warkworth hermitage in the
Shire of Cumberland, which has been celebrated in the ballads of Percy,
who was Dean of Carlisle: but subsequently Bishop of Dromore, in Ireland.
But now the lady of the manse was in a fix. Some socks had
been previously sent to an Alabama soldier who was stockingless. He
had written to express his thankfulness, but added that in taking aim
at the Yankees he would always think of his benefactress, and this was
just the thing which the lady did <hi rend="italics">not</hi> desire. She remembered who
had said, thou shalt not kill; and she did not send the socks as a prompter
to heroic deeds. Such tenderness of conscience is worthy of all
respect. Both Ney and Murat were in fifty battles, and each of them
declared that he was unconscious of ever having killed a man. Byron
used to wonder what were the feelings of a homicide. Bad enough, my
lord of Newstead Abbey, though the writer does not say so from personal
experience. The creed of the writer about war is the same with
that of William Penn. War is an unlawful game, and for this reason
we do not envy the inventors of Colt's revolver, Burnside's pistol or
Dahlgren's gun. Men die fast enough without new implements of death.
But it gives me pleasure to say that the Alabama soldier on receiving a
note from the lady, withdrew his resolve to kill any body for her sake.
It is presumed therefore that if he slew any one, it was done on his own
account or from patriotism  -  but patriotism is nowhere commanded in the
Bible. That Book was not made for France, England and Austria, but
for the world. So thought Soame Jenyns, who from a deist became a
Christian, because he could not find in Holy Writ any command to love
England better than Greenland, Labrador or Tartary. We think as
Soame thought, and hope that no offence will be taken at our thoughts.</p>
          <p>The reader must not forget that in the spring of 1862, General
McDowell advanced into Virginia with quite a numerous force, as high
as Bristoe in Prince William. Johnston had fallen back to Gordonsville,
and eventually in the direction of Yorktown. His reasons for
this movement are too obvious to need even a word in the way explanation.
His rear guard passed us, and a young lady in our vicinity wrote
some very pretty lines, suggested by the sight of that guard. Falling
back is always a damper to troops; but still they looked sprightlier
than the rear guard of Ney when he left Moscow for the Beresina. The
object of the Illinois General was to cover Washington and to aid
McClellan; but a diversion was made in his plans by the movements of
Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley. These papers, however, are not
graduated on a military scale. Whilst McDowell lay in the vicinity of
Bristoe he was visited by a snow-storm, quite unusual in our latitude
for the month of April. The violets had everywhere dotted the woods,
but the cowslips and buttercups were buried beneath mounds of snow.
Their streaks were lost to the eye and their fragrance neutralized on
<pb id="balch10" n="10"/>
the vernal air. It was a wintry scene. The tents of the army were
cheerless. The men could not sleep, and permission was given them to
spread themselves through the country, and they rushed out in 
search of better accommodations. The rooms of the Manse were crowded.
They were not brought there by the bugle of Roderick Dhu or Malcolm
Greame, but by the horn of winter, which was howling rather than
winding along the azure ridge. The men occupied every inch of space
except my chimney nook, and that would not have been given up to
Wellington without a fight. Seated in my old arm-chair, no one dared
to dispute its possession. Dominie, said one of the soldiers, can you tell
us what all this muss is about? Certainly, said I, if you will hear me
patiently during an hour, for the causes of the muss run back to the
year of our Lord 1789. But mark me, you are not to know my politics
from the dissertation. They listened with an attention entirely respectful.
Among my audience was a chaplain who was from Troy, N. Y.,
and it gave me pleasure to hear, through him, of Dr. Snodgrass of that
city, who was my fellow-student at the Princeton Seminary The chaplain
afterwards lost a limb in the war, and was sent to the Alexandria
Hospital. He will, no doubt, use crutches in ascending the pulpit.
We wish him well, for during his stay at my house he went to camp,
and brought me ten pounds of sugar and ten of coffee. The soldiers
were apparently serious at family worship, but the weather broke and
they all dispersed. One of them was named Abbot: he lingered longer
than the rest, and was extravagantly fond of music. Glad to hear that
he was no way connected with a person of the same name who wrote
the Life of Bonaparte, a production which has pleased many women
and children.</p>
          <p>A few days after the above momentous events, a Federal soldier rode in
hot haste to the door of the Manse, He refused to alight. Understand,
said he, that you have three mocking birds, to sell at ten dollars a piece.
When leaving Wisconsin, my mother made me promise to send her some
Virginia birds, that imitated the note of all other birds. Your price
will be freely given. Your filial affection is worthy of admiration, I
replied, and we wish well to the good old Wisconsin lady, but really
my aviary is very scantily furnished at present. I am no Audubon,
and have not a wren, sparrow or hummer for sale. It was clear that
the man did not believe me, for he went about peering into every tree
and examining into empty cages. But his <sic corr="skepticism">scepticism</sic> finally gave way
before his own examination, and he rode off, not without muttering his
discontent. It then occurred to me, that being April, some one in the
way of merriment had given the man a useless tramp of five miles. Or
perhaps the solution of the affair may be as follows: Three young
ladies at the Manse, and one of them a refugee, had played in succession
the little Alabama song called the Mocking Bird. The three were
called up; and young ladies, said I, we hold each of you at the rate of
a billion of dollars, but you have been put down at the low figure of ten
apiece. They were quite amused. We suspected Hill who wore the
straps of an officer, and we charged on him the sending of the man to my
<pb id="balch11" n="11"/>
domicile. Was he simple enough to come? he inquired, and laughed.
Poor Hill, he had been at war among the Aztecs, and had fought his
way up and down to the Halls of the Montezumas. He was badly
wounded at Bull Run Bridge, and reduced to a fraction at Antietam,
so that he left the army. Let us not judge men by appearances. His
exterior was not prepossessing, but he is a generous and high-minded
man. He took out a gold piece, amounting to two dollars and fifty
cents, and divided it among the servants. He offered pay for his accommodation
wherever he went. He was anxious to get home that he
might see Frank, his little son. At prayer we remembered little Frank,
and the father seemed much affected. He was surprised that a Southern
minister would pray for a Northwestern child, but we told him that
a Pagan had uttered the sentiment  -  I am a man, and nothing is alien
to me that appertains to humanity, and surely a Christian ought not to
be surpassed by a Roman. We wish well to Hill, he is a sensible soldier.
He liked to mix among men far better than among flowers, for
his imagination was not very arabesque. On taking leave of us, he 
remarked with deep feeling: Young ladies, if you will educate Frank,
he shall be here directly after the peace; and we were surprised at his
desire to give his son a Southern training. Now these incidents may
appear trifling to the reader, but he ought to remember that these
papers are not the history of the great big war that convulsed the
country. They are simple affairs, that took place in my immediate
vicinity and beneath my personal notice, and therefore the recital of
them can be tolerated, even if they be not approved.</p>
          <p>It looked strange to see a quiet home in Prince William filled up in
part with Danes, Swedes and Russians; and it is remarkable that they
stood the cold no better than the Confederates. In extreme latitudes
men seldom leave their stoves. Even St. Petersburg is shut up all
winter, and for this reason, when Russians venture out in a more
moderate climate they become chilly. 'Tis true the Cossacks pursued
Napoleon, but vindictive feeling against the man kept them warm, and
in the chase of him they were going south. The Swedes talked of
Jenny Lind, and of Augustus Adolphus, the great champion of
Protestantism. The Danes had little to say about Tycho Brahe, for they
did not understand his astronomy. The Russians knew something of
Peter the Great, but nothing about Pushkin, their poet, who foolishly
lost his life in a duel. There was quite a diversity of temperament
among my numerous guests. Some were garrulous and other taciturn;
some sullen and others easily pleased; some grave and others merry;
some lazy and others would hitch up my team and bring in a cord of
wood in a hurry. Captain Caldwell, from Dartmouth College in New
Hampshire, was constitutionally excitable, but even with him a soft
answer could turn away wrath. He is a scholar, and his memory, if
he be still alive, is very retentive. In fact, Christian meekness can
keep down the quills of a porcupine in our intercourse with the world.
Among the Northerners was a man whom his comrades called Jersey.
We could not ascertain whether or not he was from that island in the
<pb id="balch12" n="12"/>
English Channel, but he was last from Brooklyn. After leaving my
house, we heard that my friend Jersey had behaved badly; but the
report was false, for Lieutenant Hoysradt, who called on us after the
battle of Gettysburg, told me that he had distinguished himself in that
affair. The Confederates had captured one of the Federal standards
and borne it away; but Jersey rushed into the thickest of the fight,
and the standard was re-taken. For this deed he was promoted on the
spot. The writer cannot determine the exact number of soldiers who
came to the Manse during that April snow-storm. They amounted to
an inundation; but in an overflow of the Nile the minarets of the
Delta are everywhere visible to the Egyptians, and it was my business
to ask them about their Churches, and bring into view the steeples of
their sacred edifices; Leslie, the Provost Marshal, was then at my
house. His name indicated that he was Scotch. He had come from
Balmoral in the Shire of Aberdeen, near to which place Queen Victoria
has a palace, and in its vicinity Prince Albert used to shoot grouse.
As General Ewell's residence, called Stony Lonesome, was on the hill
that overlooked my premises, Leslie very kindly took an ambulance
and brought the General's books to my house. They were preserved
in that way, for some soldiers think no more of Homer's Iliad than of
the History of Tom Thumb, or of the splendid creations of Sir W.
Scott than of Dilworth's spelling book. When the General was told of
this fact, he was peculiarly gratified. But short articles are more
coveted at present than those that are long.</p>
          <p>We are happy to acknowledge the general accuracy of your printing.
But permit me to say that the concluding sentence of my previous letter
needs correction. You call my son Chambers instead of Chalmers,
and my manuscript stood as follows: But bearing the name of an illustrious
Scotch divine he was released in a few days. Some of your readers have accused
me of calling myself an illustrious divine. No! no: the writer is nothing but a shady divine.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. III.</head>
          <p>“Home  -  sweet home.” This is the title of a song which was written
by my friend Howard Payne. He was a bachelor, and never knew the
charm of domestic life. After wandering late and long, he died in
Algiers. A petition was sent to the Government that his remains might
be brought from Africa to the United States, and, as the hurly-burly
war is over, we hope the wishes of his friends may be gratified. This
song was hummed on the way from Washington to my Manse. After
a long detention in that city, by the illness of Mrs. Genl. Macomb, how
refreshing is a sight of the Blue Ridge.</p>
          <p>A writer should always be judged by what he professes to execute.
In these papers the reader need not expect the movement of great
armies, or the recital of closely contested battles. Such things are
<pb id="balch13" n="13"/>
freely handed over to our historians, whilst the writer proceeds, with
his present unambitious task, which is to add a few incidents to those
already stated. These small affairs took place both with Federals and
Confederates, and in telling them we must keep in mind that narrow
pass in which Jonathan surprised the Philistine garrison. It had a
sharp rock on the North, and one equally sharp on the South: but the
writer hopes to get through without giving offence, that in all things
the Ministry be not blamed.</p>
          <p>The following incident is about a little dog whose name is Bruto.
On the morning that Gen. Ewell left for the war, the writer went over
to his residence to bid him adieu. It was a distance of five hundred
yards from my own dwelling. His brother committed the diminutive
creature to the keeping of my son, and a remarkable attachment grew
up between the parties. His temporary owner could not stroll to my
gate without being accompanied by the dog. He followed him wherever
he went, and was with him on the evening he was captured and taken
to Washington. Bruto returned after night, and we concluded that his
master would soon make his appearance. But he did not, for he was
safely lodged in the Carroll House. The dog was disconsolate, and for
several days refused every kind of nourishment, constantly looking in
the direction where his master was taken. When the prisoner returned
the canine affair could not suppress its joy. Till then the writer never
tolerated dogs. It was enough to know that they would bite. Byron's
attachment to his Newfoundlander was set down as a piece of affectation,
and the St. Bernard stories as humbug. We had heard of their
protecting children, and that they had discovered murders, and how
they had defended Grampian, Pentland and Pyrenean shepherds, but
we regarded all this as gammon. But in future we must entertain a
better opinion of the canine species. When convicted of an error, that
error ought to be confessed.</p>
          <p>The curiosity of the Federals who came on my premises, was intense.
It extended to the garden, carriage-house, cistern, and kitchen. They
peered about the walls of the Manse. What is this? said one of them,
who came from the Knickerbocker city. That is a sketch of the Catskill
mountains, which run through several counties of New York, and
you ought to have known it at sight. They seemed pleased at our having
any thing contiguous to Sleepy Hollow. But mark me, said I, the
two peaks of the Catskill, as measured by Captain Partridge, are not so
high as those of Otter in the Blue Ridge. Virginia must not yield in
its scenery to the land of the Gothamites. And what is this? said another
of my guests. A picture of Evangeline, I replied, drawn, no doubt,
from fancy. Fancy might have made the heroine of Nova Scotia or
Acadia much handsomer than she appears in that representation By
whom was it executed? he rejoined. By Mrs. Ewing of Orange county
-  not in New York, but Virginia. And what is this? said a third
soldier. A view of my native town, which lies on the north banks of
the Potomac.  It holds the Manse once occupied by my Sire. But to
prevent any further guessing, it occurred to me to become a kind of
<pb id="balch14" n="14"/>
<foreign lang="it">cicerone</foreign> to the little ornaments of my cottage: This is a sketch of
Lake Como in Italy, and one of the stone buildings on its margin. It
was presented by a lady who came to Virginia from near Woodstock, in
Oxford, England, together with many other pieces of English scenery,
and among them Tintern Abbey on the Wye. And here is a Swiss
cottage sent me by Prosinger who emigrated from Munich in Bavaria.
And here is a bust of Petrarch, from Florence, and of Roscoe, from Liverpool;
and here is a branch of palm from the tomb of Paul and Virginia
in the island of Mauritius; and here is a staff from the Moluccas:
and lastly, as the schedule is somewhat tedious, here is a large picture
of my <hi rend="italics">small self</hi>. What, said Major Jones, do you preach in gown and
bands? No; but the likeness was taken by Mason, a young artist of
Snow Hill, who died at an early age He worked under the instigation
of a bachelor, who was not without some predilection for clerical
dress, and as his money paid the artist, it was not my province to interfere
with his fancy. The black gown is not amiss, but we should have
rebelled against the white surplice, because it is both Jewish and Papal.
Hope the reader will not regard me as a virtuoso, like Horace Walpole
of Strawberry Hill.</p>
          <p>The blockade became more and more tightened. The want of leather
was general. My shoes were all down at the heel. My thoughts
about sandals were quite intense. The Bard of the Seasons wanted a
pair of shoes on the soles of which to pace the footways of London.
The window in Pembroke College is shewn to this day out of which Dr.
Johnson tossed a couple of hobnail commodities. And Josephine, when
going from Martinique to France, wanted a pair for her daughter Hortense.
What was to be done? To superintend farming operations in
my stockings was rather awkward. We could not walk to the gate,
the spring or the meadow. But after a noon of lamentation, a pretty
twilight fell round the Manse, and a lonely horseman was approaching
my door. His name was Alexander. He was not a combatant, but an
engineer. He was of Scotch descent, and on a visit to Washington,
had just fallen in with the chief of his clan, to whom he renewed his
homage. Dismount, I said, and pass the night. Some of your men
have just brought me several pounds of coffee. Could not, he replied.
But here's a pair of shoes; try if they will fit. They fit exactly, was
my answer. You guessed well at my measure. He rode away very
briskly, for he had come five miles from his camp. But during the
whole war, night was turned into day and day into night. Nor was
this all the good fortune which <sic corr="befell">befel</sic> the Manse about this time: for
hearing of my shoeless feet, Commissary Bundy sent me a pair of boots,
and Col. De Luc a pair of sandals with silk strings. The Colonel was
of French extraction, and hailed from St. Paul, on the east banks of the
Mississippi. He talked a great deal about the laughing waters of
Minnesota, and shewed me some ambrotypes of the aquatic scenery, of
which he was so fond. He was a lawyer, and, of course, a special
pleader for his State. But, Colonel, said I, look yonder That is the
line of the Blue Ridge; and though your country be undulating, it
<pb id="balch15" n="15"/>
holds no such mountain as the one now in sight. That elevation is full
of cool fountains and fragrant leaves. Here the confab ended, but he
gave me an Oration which had just been delivered in Boston, by O. W.
Wolines, and upon which he requested some critical remarks. They
were prepared and sent down to camp by a Northern soldier, who rode
as express. It was a good-natured piece of criticism, with a request
that it might be forwarded, not to the Czar of all the Russians, but to
the Autocrat of the Breakfast Table. The Colonel took all in good
part, for on the next Sabbath he was in the church at my house, and
heard a sermon from that blessed petition, give us this day our daily
bread.</p>
          <p>Paper at present is uncommonly scarce, as you will see from the
scraps on which this communication is written. Perhaps some of your
readers may be glad of the fix we are in, because it has shortened this
letter. But we hope for a supply after my return from our Synod,
which meets at Lynchburg, in sight of the Otter Peaks. They will
look, we fear, less inviting than usual in their Autumnal dress. For
the present, adieu.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. IV.</head>
          <p>One evening my third daughter was riding from the Federal camp.
She was accompanied by a servant: but a young officer rode up and
desired the privilege of seeing her safely home. He would listen to no
expostulation. He was told that he might be captured on the way, and
then she would be charged with decoying him into danger. But the
young knight persevered, for he had come from the smoke of <sic corr="Pittsburgh">Pittsburg</sic>,
and his sight must have been rather dim. The party reached the Manse
some time after twilight, and rode quite briskly up to the kitchen.
Since the absence of the young lady, three Confederate soldiers, all
armed cap-a-pie, had arrived on my premises with the purpose of spending
the night. They were in the parlor, the door and windows of which
were open, for it was summer, and the moon was throwing its reflections
into the room which they occupied. We heard distinctly the tramping
of the horses as they approached our culinary establishment. My consort
withdrew with the quickness of an Irish fairy or a Devonshire
pixie, and in a hurry warned the young man of his critical situation.
But he had lost the points of the compass, for the woods through which
he had come were exceedingly dense. Which way lies my camp? asked
the bewildered knight. Don't know, said the lady, being myself a
keeper at home; but my son is one of the Confederates, and my creed is
that the rites of hospitality are more sacred than the laws of war. But
no talking. At that she ran with a footstep, quite elastic for a lady of
sixty-two, and beckoned out the young soldier. Gulielmi, said the
mother, this young man asks you to go with him a mile, but go with
him twain. Don't mind your arms; but trust to his honor. Were he
<pb id="balch16" n="16"/>
to harm you he would be a fiend, whereas he seems to be a gentleman.
So he escaped: and who would not skedaddle sooner than to go to the
Libby or Fort Warren. He wore a sabre which he took off, because of
its dangling. If he call for it the weapon can be restored. Gainer by
this affair one sabre, but my anxiety to keep it is not very great: for
they who take the sword shall perish by the sword. Was it right to
save him? Yes; for he was performing an act of civility, and my politics
shall never outrun my chivalry. We choose to be polite, and taking men
prisoners is a very clownish business. The young man's name was Easton,
and we mention names for fear the reader may look upon these incidents
as fictions instead of realities. But permit me to mention an
incident somewhat resembling the above, although its termination was
not quite so happy. Another daughter went over to the Federal camp
to make a few purchases. She was introduced to Gen. Meade, who was
a kind of an American Creole, for he was born in Spain, probably at
Madrid on the Manzenarez. His father was Minister to the Court of that
city. When the fair daughter of Eve was about leaving his tent, the
General called an officer, and ordered him to guard the lady home. No,
General, said the lady, he may be sent to Belle Isle before you see him
again. Not the least danger, was the reply; but in passing a clump of
woods out came two Confederates ; but being one to two, the officer
wisely surrendered. The lady protested, but little did the captors care
for the tongue of a woman. But scarcely had the prisoners reached
Richmond before a letter stating the circumstances was forwarded to
the Hon. James A. Seddon, at that time Secretary of War. He immediately
searched for the young man, and having found him, ordered his
release. The pen is sometime more powerful than the sword. Arrests
were frequent. On a beautiful summer evening, a gentleman from New
Hampshire by the name of Snow, was driving me home from the Church
in which the writer had just been officiating. Wishing for a little
pedestrian exercise, he dropped me a half a mile off from my house, and
was returning in his chariot when he was met by some Confederate cavalry
and sent to Manassas, and from thence to Richmond. We wrote to
Gen. Beauregard in his behalf, and to the Rev. Dr. Hoge of Richmond:
and it gives me pleasure to say, that in three weeks he was set at liberty.
This gentleman knows how to bear the frowns of fortune. He
owned property in New York, but it was consumed by fire. He then
bought a farm in Prince William; but in consequence of the war, not a
plank is left, either of his barn or dwelling. He then purchased a
steamer to ply between Washington and Alexandria, but it was sunk
into the Potomac. He then entered into the coal business on the Chesapeake
and Ohio canal, but Mosby captured all his mules. Will any
one doubt that he is possessed of a brave heart and that decision of
character of which Foster has so eloquently written.</p>
          <p>One bright afternoon three Confederates rode up to my yard. They
dismounted, but instead of coming into the Manse, they laid themselves
down in the shade of some locust trees, where they fell into a sleep as
sound as was that of Gulliver's in Laputa. All the previous night they
<pb id="balch17" n="17"/>
had been scouting. Sleep has been eulogized by Dr. Young, and we
only wish that the repose of these knights could have been witnessed
by the Bard of Welwyn. Soldiers should be on their guard. Saul
went to sleep in a Hebrew cave, and lost in that way the skirt of his
garment, but our knights, Martin, Smith and Boteler, came near the
loss of their lives. We have heard of the Three Graces; the three
witches on the Forres Moor; of the three wise men of Gotham, but this
triple group were not very sagacious in slumbering when they should
have had wide open the hundred eyes of Argus. For who is this running
from the kitchen and laying her ebony hands on the three sleepers
and shaking them to pieces, and crying out  -  they are coming! they are
coming! It was a servant woman who had descried fifteen Federals
descending the slope of a hill, and spurring steeds that were flecked in
foam. They were commanded by Lieutenant Littlefield, and a John
Gilpin race was commenced. The knights sprung to their saddles
sooner than they could whistle Jack Robinson. They cleared the bars
of my fence  -  crossed a brook which flowed through a holm  -  ascended
a hill, and though not killed, buried themselves in the woods. In the
meantime the Federals lost ground by taking down instead of leaping
the bars. As no mischief was done we enjoyed the chase. When the
Lieutenant returned, the lady of the Manse expressed her satisfaction
that his men had not fired. We thought your son of the Black Horse
was one of the three, he replied. We only wanted to tuck them away
into Fort Delaware. Poor Littlefield. He was a meritorious young
man, but in a few weeks afterwards he was taken sick with the camp
fever and died in Washington, far away from his Northwestern home.
Towards night the Confederates returned in search of a bag of oats they
had left in their flight, and which the Federals had overlooked. They
were supplied with milk, and let me advise the reader to enter into a
long rumination on the usefulness of the cow. Like Dr. Jenner, of
Gloucester, England, the writer often leans over the bars of the cowpen
to think of his vaccine discovery, for which Parliament voted him ten
thousand pounds, when they ought to have given him ten times the
sum. And as men will go to war in contrariety to his opinions, the
writer is not sorry that Morgan whipped Tarlton at the battle of the
Cowpens. This letter is sufficiently brief to suit the most scrupulous
editor. There is at present a scarcity of paper in Old Prince William,
though the county be named in honor of a Dutch King. We hope to
procure a supply. A paper-mill might be useful at present in this part
of the Old Dominion.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. V.</head>
          <p>It is not pleasant to deprive books of their blank leaves, but what
scribbler will fail to do this should he be pushed for paper? It was
done by Addison and Pope. Why not, then, by the occupant of a
dwelling hid in the woods, and far away from towns, where paper is
<pb id="balch18" n="18"/>
sold? Throughout the war, the Manse was subject to calls both by
individuals and companies. My feelings were quite interested in young
Allston, who sojourned awhile at my house. He was without a horse,
but subsequently obtained a very superior one in a raid. He was brave
to a fault, but we exceedingly doubt whether bravery be a virtue.
Were all men destitute of this quality, would there or could 
there be any fighting? Before the Fall, Adam and Eve were gentle as a pair
of doves skipping along the walks of Eden. War was one of the evils
which came into the world with the loss of our original innocence. We
ought therefore to oppose it under all circumstances if we ever expect
to recover in the Second what was lost in the First Adam. But a word
or two about my young friend, for he did not seem to have been more
than nineteen years of age. He was born in Ireland, but was taken
when a boy to the city of Hereford, in the west of England, which is
situated on the north bank of the Wye. In coming from Hereford, I
remarked, you come from the birth-place of the celebrated Garrick.
Dr. Johnson said of him, that he promoted the gaiety of nations, but
nations need to be solemn rather than gay, especially in time of war.
All traditions of him, he replied, have died out in Hereford, but he is
still spoken of in London. The confidence with which my young friend
replied, convinced me that he was quite intelligent. I have caught
trout in the Wye and the Severn, he continued, and have gone in my
boat as high as the Shire of Montgomery. Then you have been at
Ludlow wood and Ludlow castle? Yes, and the wood is still green,
but the castle is brown with age and stern in its ruins. My skiff could
touch at Chepston, Tintern Abbey, or the town of Ross, where lived
John Kyrle, the good old bachelor. The trees he planted in Ross are
still erect. Have been up the Welsh rivers and over the rough mountains
of the principality, but always glad to see Hereford again, for
absence only sweetened home. What bait did you use in angling?
Anything, he answered, that resembled a fly, and like Sir Humphrey
Davy, we could make a bait out of the feathers of the peacock. And
what induced you to leave such juvenile pleasures for the scenes of
war? We heard, he replied, that there was a great fuss in your country,
and we concluded to cross the sea and help the Confederates, who were
thought in England, to be the weaker party. The conversation of this
soldier was instructive, but he was captured in the battle of the
Wilderness. His comrades in arms have taken special pains to ascertain
his fate; and the conjecture is that he died either in prison or in a
hospital, at Richmond. If so he will never again behold the coral
reefs of England. There is a bare possibility, however, that he may
have returned to Hereford, the city from which he came.</p>
          <p>A soldier from Minnesota. He had been taken prisoner, but the
squad by whom he was captured, not wishing to lose time in going to
Richmond, paroled him on the spot. He was a Frenchman, and we
asked him to sing the Marseilles hymn in the language in which it was
written. With this request he immediately complied. It stirred my
heart like a trumpet; but after ten minutes reflection, the military fire
<pb id="balch19" n="19"/>
fell down to zero. Who would repudiate his books for one of Sharp's
rifles or a Dahlgren gun? Certainly no civilized man would be guilty
of such folly. The Frenchman was quite anxious to acquire the pronunciation
of our language, and we set him to reading a volume of my
manuscript sermons. You do slap now and ten at the Pope, he
remarked, as he went on with his task. Its a part of my religion, I
replied, never to spare the old man of sin. Dat is right, he answered,
for de French be not dependent on de Vatican. Napoleon III. supply
him wid de bayonets because he want him to feel his great dependence.
Are there many of the frog-eating nation in Minnesota? Good many  -  
good many do go from Montreal; but de priests do not like de going,
for de Methodists do catch de Catholics, as de French do catch de
frogs, and de priests are left in de Church. In the lurch, you mean.
Dat is right, he said, in de lurch. De priests have to fry some fish.
No; you mean that the priests have other fish to fry than going after
those that the Methodists catch! Dat is right, for mineself have seen
how de priests do grab all dey can get. Have you had, I asked, any
hair-breadth escapes in the war? One, he answered, that do deserve
mention. Mineself was under de apple tree, and a shell come at de
tree and de apples fall down and bruise mine head, and where de shell
did explode lift up mine haversack way up in de air, and cut up de
haversack to pieces. And what became of the apples? I did eat up
de apples, for in de heat of de battle one great tirst did come to mine
mouth. Now, said I, you must quit your de, dey, mineself, tirst and
all such things, for the English is a manly language. You must read
my manuscripts for one month, and your pronunciation must be corrected
as you proceed. This proposition was agreed to, and the Frenchman
improved surprisingly under my tuition. He began to talk like a
man instead of chattering like a monkey. He gave me the outlines of
Minnesota  -  its undulations, St Paul's, the Falls of St. Antony, the
prairies and their interior lakes. He imitated the barking of the
prairie dogs, which was very amusing. These little creatures, however,
are greatly lessened in numbers since Lewis and Clarke explored
the Missouri in 1805. My guest had enjoyed the advantage of a good
education among the Jesuit priests of Canada. We went over to Ringwood,
and took a sketch of my former home, and attended the meeting
of Presbytery in Greenwich, near my residence, and was much pleased
with a discourse from the pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church of
Alexandria. His name is Oliver Barry, but written by himself Olivier
Barre. We wish him well in the future.</p>
          <p>A third soldier arrived at the Manse. He was from Philadelphia.
He was sick, and his disease was clearly of the pulmonary type, and of
course he was unfit for service. His name was Pullen, and we nursed
him as well as we could in the famine produced by the war. In a week
he partially recovered, and went out to enjoy the shade of my yard.
We looked up and saw a Confederate soldier from Abbeville, South
Carolina, by the name of Guffin, riding Jehu-like to my dwelling with
a Burnside pistol in his hand. Pullen, said I, throw up your arms in
<pb id="balch20" n="20"/>
token of surrender. We then took Guffin aside, who immediately
wrote him a parole which was witnessed by myself, as my sign manual
was known to several persons in Washington. When he left, we walked
with him a mile, and he offered me a greenback, amounting to what
Barry would call five dollar. Don't keep an inn, I remarked, but my
<foreign lang="fr">beau ideal</foreign> has always been to keep one, and talk to travelers whilst
my man Jess should attend to the horses. Why, you heap coals of
fire on my head. No, you mistake the meaning of that text. When
we are kind to an enemy the kindness makes the recipient heap the
coals on his own head. Hope that they will not scorch your fingers.
When you get home, present me to your wife and children. That I
will, he replied, and send you some Harper's. So do; but not the
numbers containing Abbott's Life of Napoleon. These Manse reminiscences
will be continued.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. VI.</head>
          <p>The waiter was standing one day at the door of the Manse looking at
two of his horses grazing on a hill just above Cat Tail Run, which 
empties into a broader stream, called Kettle Run. What names for a pair
of pretty brooks winding through velvet savannahs! Dr. Johnson,
however, was very fond of his cat, and Cowper of his kettle. We are
therefore reconciled to the names; but not to what took place on Arrelton
Hill. Some Federal soldiers started the animals, and there was
quite a chase and a race. The horses knew that their owner had given
them as good nubbins as his crib could afford, and were therefore opposed
to being taken prisoners. They liked Cat Tail water, as it would
have been called by the Scotch, but poor things, they were noosed  -
lassoed  -  bridled  -  captured and borne away over the very stream at
which they had so often slaked their mouths. Like the renowned Vicar
of Wakefield, your correspondent determined to take everything in good
humor, for otherwise, the sun might have gone down on his wrath.
The pillow often soothes displeasure, and the next morning we sent the
following good-natured note to the officer in command:</p>
          <q type="letter" direct="unspecified">
            <text>
              <body>
                <div1 type="letter">
                  <p>COLONEL:  -  Yesterday a squad of your men took off a couple of my horses. One of them is cream-colored, like the steed that Washington rode at Yorktown in 1781, and the other a bright sorrel, like one mentioned in the Arabian Nights. Please consult Blackstone on the mighty difference between <hi rend="italics"><foreign lang="la">meum</foreign></hi> and <hi rend="italics"><foreign lang="la">teum</foreign></hi>. Possession is nine out of twelve points of the law, and therefore you have no moral or military right to Fan and Reuben. It is not my purpose to use either of them in making a raid on your camp. A Presbyterian minister must not turn soldier as if he were a Romish Pontiff. One of the animals is a pony that carries my corn and wheat to Langley's mill, and you must not forget that Henry Clay was a millboy. With the going down of the sun, let me see both my steeds in their own fragrant clover fields, and the vesper beams of the orb of day will reflect renewed lustre on your deeds. Permit me to subscribe my middle name, in the hope that your sense of justice will be in full flower.</p>
                  <closer>
                    <signed>T. BLOOMER BALCH.</signed>
                  </closer>
                </div1>
              </body>
            </text>
          </q>
          <p>Who took this note to camp? We were obliged to employ the daughters
of Eve as our plenipotentiaries, because their tongues are so much
<pb id="balch21" n="21"/>
more reserved than those of gentlemen. A very discreet young lady
and a pedestrian offered to go on the errand. She found the horses all
packed for travel, and about moving for the Rappahannock. Unpack
those horses, said the heroine; they belong to one who lives in a Manse,
and were you to take a hawthorn bud out of a Scottish Manse, the Coldstream
guards who figured at Waterloo would be up and at you. The
Colonel caught the tones of her voice and hurried to the muss. Colonel,
said she, read this epistle, and then tell me to ride back this pony like
a Virginia <hi rend="italics">Die Vernon</hi>. The Colonel reading. Who wrote this note?
My sire. Then your sire must be an odd fish, for he commands a military
man, instead of asking a favor.  He commands you, Colonel, to do
to others as others ought to do to you. That's all. What favor is it to
restore his own? Aristotle so teaches and so does the Decalogue, as
expounded in the Sermon on the Mount. Let the pendulum of your
determination swing itself to the side of justice and all will be well.
Take your horses, said the gallant Colonel, and as we are breaking up
our cantonment, take home anything we leave. The last was done according to
Gunter. Gainer by the temporary absence of my steeds,
three water buckets bound in brass hoops: four brooms, the sight of
which made me shudder; one mug, one Pilgrim's Progress, and one
ambrotype of Napoleon, which should have been sent to Abbott rather
than to the owner of the Blue Ridge Manse. Thus ended the adventure
of the horses, and on getting back, Reuben ranged as proudly as
did the war-horse of Wellington after the affair at Waterloo.</p>
          <p>It gives me pleasure to record some of the generous actions of the
Federals. Let me tell the following: Corporal Finlan was passing
my house. He was called in and offered a cup of milk. Where do
you come from, corporal? From about Meansville, he replied, on the
east bank of the Susquehanna, Bradford county, Pennsylvania. That
county, I rejoined, may have been named from the town of 
Bradford-on-Avon in the English shire of Wilts. Not posted up in such
things, said the corporal. He went on his way. Two or three weeks had
gone by, when the writer was aroused one dreary night, about twelve
o'clock, by some one fumbling at the door of the Manse. Who comes
there, I called out, with a stentorian voice. A friend, was the reply.
We opened the door and Finlan entered. Some fresh combustibles
were put on the fire. Quite an unseasonable hour, he remarked.
Couldn't elude my pickets till late, or our officers who were scouting.
Lost my way and strayed off to an old field; encountered dogs;
asked the way to your house; have found it at last. As there are lots
of Presbyterians in Bradford, have brought you some notions. At that
he opened his haversack and out rolled a baker's dozen of Northern
apples, and as many of golden oranges. Here, too, is some sugar, tea
and coffee, and fifteen papers of Anderson's solace, and enough gazettes
to keep you reading for a week. Finlan, said I, go up and take a bed.
No! must be back at camp. At this the lady of the Manse made her
appearance. You don't go without a bowl of coffee, one for you and
one for the Dominie. And none for yourself? No; not at this hour
<pb id="balch22" n="22"/>
of the night. And so we two sipped our coffee and piped away on
Anderson's weed. He rose to go. Stop, said I, here's a greenback to
reward you for your pains. None of it, none of it, he answered, and he
hurried away. We hope that all minnies, shells, balls, pistols and
sabres, spared the life of that man, and that he was welcomed home by
his Bradford friends.</p>
          <p>When Gibbon, the deist, was writing the History of the Roman
Empire, he was employed on an objective task, or one outside of himself;
but when he wrote his Memoirs, he was subjectively employed.
Sorry to make myself the subject of these papers. Can't help it; for
shall the writer be mum when others are talking or asleep; when
others are awake or lazy; when others are active. We will go on with
incidents in which my lilliputian self bears a part. The writer one
Sabbath afternoon was occupying his arm-chair, superior as it is to the
one owned by Gay the poet, and musing on that cloud of war which
was expanding itself more and more in dark folds over the land. A
young man of eighteen entered. From what point of the compass do
you come? Richland District, South Carolina. Very well, then; you
probably know something of Dr. Thornwell of Columbia, whom it was
my good fortune to meet in the Presbyterian General Assembly, which
convened at Richmond, in 1847. My father, the youth replied. Was
he well when you left Columbia? At that he took from his pocketbook
an obituary notice of the Doctor, of whose decease the writer was
ignorant, for armies bar out both joyful and distressing intelligence.
My father, rejoined the son, would have studied his eyes out had he
lived. Then, I replied, he would have been like Homer, Milton,
Ossian, Saunderson and Prescott. It is not well, however, to be
over-bookish even to work our way into such a distinguished group. Too
many books are one, but no books at all are another extreme, and you
must pass between the extremes if you would learn to think. Just
then, two additional young men entered the parlor. Their names
turned out to be Logan and Bowie, who were comrades of Thornwell.
Are you connected, said I, to the first, with a Scotch minister of your
name who preached in South Leith, near Edinburgh? My sire, he
replied, is a minister in South Carolina, and his ancestors were Scotch.
Then here is a little memoir of the South Leith Logan, which can be
read in thirty minutes. He wrote several beautiful hymns and the
Braes of Yarrow; but everybody seems to have written about those
Braes. And are you the son of a minister? said I, to Bowie. Only
the grandson, he replied, of the Rev. Dr. Coffin, President of Greenville
College in East Tennessee. Knew him well, and officiated for him in
1818, at Greenville, on the French Broad. Happy to return his hospitality
in the person of his representative. He was from Newburyport,
Massachusetts, on the Merrimac, and became the pioneer of learning
to the valleys of the South-west. Now, then, young gents, take
notice. We four, including myself, are sprung from ministers, and as
such we must behave ourselves throughout the war like Christians. In
came Sparks from Louisiana, who before the war was preparing for the
<pb id="balch23" n="23"/>
ministry. Great office that to which he looked. Our fathers, where
are they, and the prophets, do they live forever? The next day my
guests took their leave of the Manse, but alack, alack, two of them
fell in skirmishes. Sparks on the farm of the widow Bedine, and Thornwell
at Undon, near Warrenton Junction. We heard the pistol
which laid Thornwell low. After his wound he was taken to a hospital
in Alexandria, where he received the kindest attention from the friends
of his father. The lady of the Manse wrote to Mrs. Thornwell detailing,
the circumstances connected with the fall of her son, and received
a reply which evinced the anguish of a mothers heart. We are commanded
to weep with all who weep. Oh! Pagan Mars, what sad deeds
have been enacted in thy name.</p>
          <p>Rode to the Federal camp, and was introduced to General Howard,
from Augusta, in Maine. The town is on the Kennebec, the navigation
of which is interrupted by the Tetonic falls. The General, however,
was not very romantic about cascades. He had lost his right arm in
the battle of Seven Pines, but had since learned to scribble with his
left. We sat at his tent door, not in the heat of the day, but some time
after the sun had passed his meridian. How glorious he is on his noon-day
line, but how lovely when he bestows his tints on cloud and woods,
or when he inserts them into the arch of the rainbow. We were glad
to find that the General was a professor of religion, and that he sometimes
addressed his men on topics of vital importance. We discussed
at large the state of the country, and it was clear that my interlocutor
wanted to find out my leanings, but he was baffled in all his efforts. He
told me, unequivocally, that he doubted the propriety of a Christian's
going to war. We pointed his attention to the faith of Centurians as
mentioned in the Gospels; but remarked at the same time that the
responsibility in making war was thrown not on them, but on the Cæsars
of Rome. Tools are not to answer at the great day, but they who employ
the tools. Not the invincible guard, but Napoleon who created
that guard. Just at that moment a soldier stepped up to the tent, and
asked me, Are you the author of the Ringwood Discourses? 'Tis so said,
was my reply. Read them down in Maine. He disappeared. Who
can tell which way a book will travel when published. It may go to
China or Peru, to Juan Fernandez or Tahiti. A legless soldier then
came for the purpose of asking the General to make him a sutler. Very
well, said the General, but be on the look out or Moseby may get your
goods and chattels. Understand, said Major Balloch, that you have
been in Newburyport. In 1819, I replied, and preached six times over
the dust of Whitfield. Then don't ride, said he, till we get you some
Java. And Major, please add to it an ounce of the hyson and a thimblefull
of white sugar. The writer then rambled home, beneath an
evening, in the presence of which Tintoretto would have dropped his
pencil in despair. For the present, adieu.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="balch24" n="24"/>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. VII.</head>
          <p>In my last, mention was made of General Howard, and in the present
letter it is my wish to say something to his credit. The village, or
rather the hamlet of Greenwich stands more than two miles from the
Manse. 'Tis on a hill, and commands a fine view of the Bull Run; but
we wish that the mountain had a less homely name. Its environs
abound in oak and pine. It has a Swiss cottage, built by Charles Green,
who, in winter, resides in Savannah, Georgia, and who brought me some
poppies from the villas of Cicero and Pliny. His residence is shaped
like the houses of Helvetia. On the southern edge of Greenwich stands
another kiosk, reared by another Savannah gentleman, whose name is
Sorrel, a native of one of the <sic corr="Caribbean">Carribean</sic> islands, perhaps Martinique.
At the Northwest of the settlement is a cottage which was occupied by
an English lady from Liverpool, England, who once was a member in
the Church of Dr. Raffles, a relative of Sir Thomas Raffles, who introduced
so many reforms into the berry island of Java. Her cottage was
called “Leasowes,” in honor of Sherstone's grounds near Hagley Park,
Worcester, England. Upon the breaking out of the war she went to
Canada, and her home was occupied by a gentleman whose name was
Jourdan. There were two Churches in Greenwich  -  one Free, and the
other Presbyterian. The Free was of plank, and the other of brick.
The plank one perished in the war; but the brick is still standing a
monument of religious taste, and uninjured in the hurricane of civic
strife. Jourdan was taken prisoner by McCabe and sent to several
prisons. He reached home, but soon after, died. McCabe was killed
near Richmond. Sorrel's Kiosk was burnt. But what connection has
all this with the humanity of General Howard? We thought that the
reader would like to know the locality at which a military court was
convened for the trial of seven deserters from the Federal army. It
was a solemn time. The lives of six were saved, and the Maine General
exerted himself to save the seventh, but all in vain. The culprit was
taken out a solitary victim, and under the fire of twelve men, he fell
over into his grave in the rear of the Presbyterian Church. Not wishing
to hear the fatal shot, the writer wandered away from the Manse
into the very centre of our densely-matted pines. What was the use,
thought I, of killing that one man. To prevent desertion. Why, in
his dying speech he earnestly exhorted his comrades to desert. Four
or five were shot near Brandy Station, and for a week afterwards refugees
from the army were streaming by my house. At all events, the
culprit was launched into eternity in a moment, for</p>
          <q type="verse" direct="unspecified">
            <l>Ashes to ashes, dust to dust,</l>
            <l>Was never spoken of the soul.</l>
          </q>
          <p>A man at the bars. He seemed loth to advance, but he need not
have been afraid of dogs, for Gen. Ewell's terrier was just as harmless
as the lap-dog of Josephine the Empress, or Madame Sevigne, the letter
<pb id="balch25" n="25"/>
writer. We went towards him that his apprehensions might be quieted.
How is your Honor, this morning? Not a member of Congress, I replied,
but a preacher. How then, is your Reverence? The brogue of
the stranger settled the point that he was from the Emerald Isle, and
we walked in company towards the Manse. There was an Irish warmth
in the manner of my guest, whilst we immediately perceived that he
was not devoid of the eloquence peculiar to his nation, and before leaving
us it became certain that he had been to Blarney Castle The pitch
of his language was high. We like Ireland. It holds the broad Shannon
and Ovoca, that spreads its green tints by the side of its manifold
brooks; and the esthetic Killarney which by reflection doubles trees,
buds and stars; and the Giant's Causeway which supplies numerous
pilgrims with its crumbling pebbles. But by this time we had reached
the Manse. What news, I asked, do you bring from the seat of the
war. They are fighting, he replied, beyond the Rappahannock; but as
it is sanguinary work a notion took me to give 'em French leave.
What: are you a deserter? Nothing of the sort. Not being a naturalized
citizen of the United States, Uncle Sam had no right to the services
of a man from a land out of which St Patrick drove all the snakes
and dislodged all the toads. May it please your Reverence, it was just
walking away. Deserters run. Mine was a ramble at leisure along the
bye-ways which led me straight to your home so renowned for Irish
hospitality. Was not aware that the Manse was celebrated for its hospitality.
Then your Reverence is not posted up in what you ought to
know. People told me on the road that you never turned off a Savoy
hand-organist, a Swiss emigrant, or a wandering Gipsey; and the good
Book says, be given to hospitality for thereby some unawares have entertained
angels. You are positive then that you are no deserter? No,
Sirree. No Irish gentleman like myself, descended from a Limerick
Baron, would forsake his colors. We fall with our feet to the foe, but
General Lee reflects no discredit on any cause. He could fight our Irish
Wellington, or take the plume out of the <foreign lang="fr">chapeau</foreign> of Napoleon First,
Second and Third. Such is the fragrance of his powder, that like
Sicilian hounds, we lost the scent of him, and he may be at Thoroughfare
Gap for aught General Pope can tell. Perhaps your Reverence
goes with the Confederates. Don't wish my politics to be known, I
replied. Your Reverence is right. Solomon must have whispered to
you so wise a determination in these days of <foreign lang="la">fama clamosa</foreign>. Were you
to preach from the Book of Esther at present, some would say that by
Haman you mean President Lincoln; and Jeff. Davis by Mordecai the
Jew, when such a thought might not have entered your spotless mind.
Couldn't, I answered, pervert the Bible to any party purposes. Another
wise determination.</p>
          <p>How unlike the Irish priests, who, instead of saying, repent ye,
mumble out, do penance ye. Such a perversion will never cross your
innocent mind or escape your eloquent tongue. The long and broad
area of Ireland does not hold on its surface so generous a soul as yourself,
and perhaps your Reverence would like to swap some old clothes
<pb id="balch26" n="26"/>
for my soldier garb, which is better than the brocade of Ispahan,
though variegated with gold and silver. Uncle Sam dresses up his army and
says, dress, men, dress. No doubt you have a pair of pants that the
Pope might wear, and a vest that Wellington would have caught at,
and a coat like that which Joseph paraded about Shechem and Dothan.
All the danger is, that my gratitude for the swap might kill me, as my
heart is a combustible that consumes me more and more at every favor
bestowed. Shouldn't like, I replied, to swap without paying the difference
in the value of the articles. Difference. Is your Reverence serious? 
Why the difference will lie on your side, payable in a greenback,
with my lasting thanks thrown in to boot. Come, lets drive a trade.
The lady of the Manse, I replied, has gone up stairs. She knows what
you want, and is rummaging in her old chests, drawers and trunks. I
saw her for a lady. It required no second sight to find out that she
was equal to any Countess in Ireland. She is worthy of a <foreign lang="ga">Erin go
Braugh</foreign>, said the soldier. So we drove a bargain. But woe to me,
said I, if they catch me in your regimentals. No danger, he rejoined.
They would as soon send an Ezra or Nehemiah to the old Capitol. My
guest, so redundant in blarney, went on his way. My suspicion is considerable
that he was a half deserter.</p>
          <p>Soldiers, both Federal and Confederate, often lost their way in our
Prince William woods and lanes. One Sabbath afternoon an officer at
the head of six men rode in a hurried manner through my gate. The
men stood back whilst the Major advanced. Though invited, he
declined to dismount. Your cedars hereabouts, said he, are very
intricate. They are so, indeed, I replied. Which is north and where is
west? If you tell me, I remarked, the exact point which you wish to
reach, or where your camps are pitched, it will be easy to put you on
your road. He was perfectly bewildered, but we gave him a map, so
that he reached his tent in safety. We were always curious to know
from what quarter strangers might have come. He reported himself
as Major Robertson from <sic corr="Pittsburgh">Pittsburg</sic>, Pennsylvania; then decamped.
In a few days he paid us a friendly visit, bringing with him Chaplain
Hunter, brother to the attorney at Charlestown, Va., who prosecuted
John Brown. He lived on an island near Detroit, Michigan, and was
quite eloquent in his description of the scenery by which he was surrounded.
We invited him to preach in the “Church which is in my
house.” He partially accepted the invitation, but said something about
Apostolical succession. We told him that the English House of Lords
was a curious source from which to draw our authority to preach the
Gospel, seeing that the bishops were required by law to proclaim that
Gospel but four times out of fifty-two Sabbaths in the year. He hinted
that the Prelates were intended to keep the Presbyters in order. 'Tis
strange, then, I answered, that their twenty-five crosiers could not
bang Wesley and Whitfield into good behavior. We waited for him
beyond the hour for service, but the Detroit Chaplain did not make his
appearance. Major Robertson was very amiable; fond of the piano;
was acquainted with my friend Dr. Plumer by reputation; admired
<pb id="balch27" n="27"/>
the Pittsburg ladies, and had made the grand tour of Europe. The last
fact rendered his conversation quite entertaining; but we have not
since heard either from the Chaplain or the Major. We are indebted
to the loss of his way for a visit from the celebrated Major Moseby.
He called about nine o'clock at night, and dismounted under some
locust trees before the door of the Manse. A full moon was shining,
but the shade of the trees prevented me from a good view of his contour,
but this is not important, as John Scott, Esq., is preparing a biography
of the Major, which will be, doubtless, quite as interesting as
the adventures of Daniel Boone, of Baron Trenck, or even of Alexander
Selkirk. It has been said that Confederates were liable to lose the
road. Two of them took their supper, one night, at a house about
three-fourths of a mile from the Manse, and were then pressed to stay
till the crack of light, but they alleged that they had never seen the
scribbler of the Decades, and wished to see him before they went back
to the Opelousas country. Well, they missed the sight by missing the
road, and got over to a neighbors on the other side of Arrelton Hill.
Glad they <sic corr="didn't">did'nt</sic> come. Why, says the reader. An hour before daylight
the Federals, twenty strong, surrounded my house looking for the
gents as if they had been the two spies who entered Jericho in the time
of Joshua. We had no flax stalks in which they could have been concealed.
So the Federals went away whilst the two were asleep like a
couple of bugs in a carpet rug. And one evening, when strolling outside
of my gate, the writer met a company of Confederate cavalry,
under the Command of Captain Alfred Carter, who lost an arm at Luray,
Page county, Va. They wanted to know the shortest cut to Catlett's,
and that cut lay exactly by the door of my kitchen. One of the men
spied an oven in which were sixteen or twenty rolls of bread which the
fire had browned. They were torn asunder in a twinkle, though we
grant its being <hi rend="italics">done</hi> by as well <hi rend="italics">bred</hi> gentlemen as the Master of the
<hi rend="italics">Rolls</hi> in England. There was a scrambling as if they were beggars
from Naples, and each man, unlike the Idumean Patriarch, devoured
his morsel alone. Every one ran from his comrades like a chicken
that gets a crumb. At first the writer was out of humor, but my ire
lasted not so long as the tints of the rainbow, when we felt reconciled
to the raiders on the oven. Happy to say they found rations upon
reaching the depot at Catlett's. Nor did we all go supperless to
bed, for we waited patiently for a second oven full, made out of a
barrel of flour sent me by General Sykes. He was a Maryland gentleman,
for Maryland is famous both for its ladies and gentlemen. For
the present, adieu.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="balch28" n="28"/>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. VIII.</head>
          <p>The famine had become grievous in the land, and there was no Egypt
into which we could send for supplies; nor any balm which could be
presented to those who held the keys that were locking up oats, corn
and wheat. How often had the writer doubted whether a dearth of
provisions would ever reach that portion of Virginia in which his lot
had been cast. Little do we know of the future. It became clear that
my pictures of continued plenty had been penciled on green leaves
which were destined to fade, or on clouds subject to evaporation. My
services, as a minister, began to take their complexion from the circumstances
in which we were placed. One of my discourses, or rather one
of my talks, was from the text, “The Lord will provide.” Habakkuk
says that the Christian has a dependence on something higher than the
buds of the fig-tree, or the blossoms of the vine. The Idumean believer
went living on, after his olives had perished and his fields were smitten.
His flocks were killed, and his stalls were empty; and the Idumean
eagle could plume his wings from a warmer nest than the one occupied by
the Patriarch. Our Lord assures us that man liveth not by bread alone.
Even at such a time we thought it right to celebrate at the Manse the
supper which our Lord had instituted on the night before his crucifixion.
We had no wine, however, on our premises, and it was a rare
element throughout the neighborhood. But Charles Green, member of
the Independent Church of Savannah, being apprised of my wishes,
sent me enough to supply the communicants, for which my sincere
thanks were returned. Two silver goblets belonging to Mrs. Jones of
Sharon, had been left at my house, and they were used on the solemn
occasion. The day was bright, and the congregation crowded. Some
were under the trees of the yard, some on the steps of the stairs, and
others in the rooms of the Manse. Several ministers were present who
gave me help in the service, and seldom has it been my lot to attend on
communicants more apparently devout. May they advance in grace.
The Divine Life has in it both an upward and downward tendency.
The Japanese permit their trees to attain their full growth: but then
dwarf them down to the smallest possible dimensions, and carry them
about in diminutive vases. So with the great Husbandman. The more
his people tower on high, the more does he reduce them into lowly violets.
And here, allow me to ask, why may not the Lord's Supper be
administered in a lower as well as an upper room  -  in a Manse  -  a grove,
or on the slope of a hill, as well is in a Church? When were the Covenanters
more happy than when they sung among the braes and kneeled
on Scottish heather! or when were Whitfield and Wesley more successful
than when they stormed the air circulating on the open fields and
sequestered downs of England?</p>
          <p>Mention has been made of what may be called an incipient famine.
Destitution has at times taken place in Canaan, Egypt, the Canary Isles,
and often in Ireland, but particularly in the <sic corr="siege">seige</sic> of Londonderry. The
<pb id="balch29" n="29"/>
reader, perhaps, may smile incredulously when we speak of a famine in
Virginia: but we can assure him that we are not inventing a fiction.
The blockade grew tighter and tighter, and many were starved at last
into the semblance of patriotism. It became my duty then to employ some
means in the way of providing for my own household, or else be deemed
worse than an infidel. To beg we were ashamed. The writer never
could relish the works of Goethe, because of his spending so much of his
ink in describing coarse German meals: but the calls of the appetite
must be satisfied either by hook or by crook<corr sic=" ">.</corr> About this time we heard
that Gen. Sykes was encamped near Ringwood, my former residence.
He was reported to be from Maryland, and we knew that every Marylander
must be a gentleman from absolute necessity. My note to him
is withheld because such a variety of those missives were written, that
their insertion would swell these reminiscences to an undue proportion.
My youngest daughter was sent with the communication, and we told
her first to read what the Apostle James had said about the use of the
tongue, and also the incident in the life of Æsop, whose master told him
to buy the best thing in the Roman market, and the next morning to
buy the worst thing, and each time he took home a <hi rend="italics">tongue</hi>. With the
tongue, said the Fabulist, we praise God, and with the same member we
abuse our neighbors. Trust me said the young lady, to be gentle as the
ring-streaked dove, and meek as the meekest bird that flew in Paradise
before the Fall. She found the General engaged in his tent; but the
voice of my ambassadress penetrated to the ear of Captain Jay, who
was a member of the General's staff. The Captain made his appearance
and received my letter. You are, doubtless, said the lady, a collateral
relative of Chief Justice Jay. The Jays of New York are a
distinguished clan. We have heard of them even among the pines of
Prince William. A relative of mine married one of the clan, but he
was not a brother; for then he would never have been a Prelatist, or
been ordained by a bishop instead of a Presbytery. How soon had the
young lady forgotten the epistle of James and the wit of Æsop. Why,
said the Captain, your father speaks in his very legible note of all the
denominations as representing the cardinal points of the compass  -  as
sailing on the same ocean and steering for the same haven. True, Captain,
but the tongue of a lady is privileged to box the circle of the
world. My remarks were meant to be playful, and win you over to a
little sympathy in the affairs of one who is as fond of Mocha as was
Napoleon First, and who, in a running way, has preached from the
Merrimac to the Cumberland, leaving at the same time a few of his
exhortations in Chatham, Cedar and Wall streets in the renowned city
of the Knickerbockers. Let me consult the General, replied the Captain.
Be in haste, when serving a lady, for she can say to one, go, and
he goeth; and to another, come, and he cometh; and the captain reappeared
in a few minutes. And what says the General? asked the lady.
He says that a private can drive you and myself to the Manse. What,
then, Captain, will become of my steed? A soldier shall ride him along
at an easy pace; and accordingly the ambulance was started. It reached
<pb id="balch30" n="30"/>
my house about twilight, and we found my new acquaintance to be a
perfect gentleman, of about twenty-one years of age, and well-informed.
He sat with us till nine of the clock, but on taking leave remarked:
Gen. Sykes requested me to present his respects, and assure you, that
to-morrow, he would send supplies to your house. Present my respects,
Captain, to the General, with many thanks for his kindness. The next
day the ambulance arrived well stocked with provisions; and over and
above the substantials, Captain Jay had added an <foreign lang="es">olla podrida</foreign>, composed
of materials from spice islands. We found some cinnamon from
Ceylon, and a good deal of pepper from Borneo, and some superior mustard
from Tewsberry, England. Come driver, said I, come and partake
of the repast, to be provided out of the commodities you have brought.
We must enjoy together a cup or two of this Java. In the mean time,
the lady of the Manse will express her gratitude to Captain Jay, for
one of her letters is worth a score of my own. The soldier and the
dominie, or the boss, as he called me, sat down to our meal, and he
told me of his neat little home near Boston, his vegetables and sundry flowers
that he collected into bouquets for the ladies of that city, until the
writer conceited himself to be talking to that Roman Emperor who
boasted so much of the products of his Dalmatain farm, or to Pliny,
who wrote <foreign lang="it">con amore</foreign> about the poppies of his villa. Captain Jay accompanied
Sherman from Atlanta to the sea coast, and we hope that he
escaped all injury in the closely-contested battle of Bentonville.</p>
          <p>The writer is a believer in a special Providence; and the man who
does not so believe, cannot be far short of atheism. He can keep to his
dreary creed, if he please: but hope he will not seek to deprive me of
a faith which has sustained my courage in the darkest hours of what
men call fortune. But about this time we heard of several boxes provided
in Washington, and awaiting transmission to my house: but how
to get them up was the question. A letter was addressed to General
Ayers from the State of Maine, explanatory of my wishes, to which he
replied in the politest terms, that they should be sent to his care. A
married daughter of yours, he remarked, sent me a quantity of ice when
we were encamped in the hot fields of Virginia, and it will give me
pleasure to comply with your request. This was acting like a gentleman;
and the affairs arrived with an additional one from Baltimore.
The one from the Monumental City inspired peculiar emotions, because
it was sent by persons in no way connected with the Manse. The last
was opened in a full congregation of the family, both white and black,
and we wished that we could all have been photographed at the
time when the hatchet flew at the box. Its contents would have been
valuable in peaceful times; but how much more so at a period of
scarcity engendered by war. Thanks to my friends on the Patapsco,
with an assurance that their kindness will not be soon forgotten. It
will perhaps give them pleasure to hear that my two daughters immediately
became as fine as a couple of Baltimore birds. The lady of the
Manse was dressed like a fiddle. The boys drew on the socks and boots,
and the ebonies came in for a share of the spoil, whilst the Dominie
<pb id="balch31" n="31"/>
devoured the books, and handed over the greenbacks to his better half.
But from time to time scarcity would continue its cheerless visits.
One day however, a carriage arrived at my door, driven by Gibson
Catlett, Esq. It was laden with the good things of this life. To whom,
said I, is the Manse indebted for this unexpected help? Not to be told,
was the reply. The gentleman does not know the difference between
his right and left hand in acts of this kind. Very well; the ebonies
will help you in taking out, as the Dutch say to their guests at meal
time. The reader may say, perhaps, yours must have been a humiliating
position. But let him remember that my position was not the
result of idleness: though the writer does not deny his being the idlest
white man in Virginia. Nor was it within my province to make the
war, for we honestly deprecate all war, except when the Creator reveals
it as <hi rend="italics">His</hi>, and not our scourge. King David was once obliged to eat the
shew bread, and King Alfred was once glad enough to devour a few oat
meal cakes when pressed by the Danes. Often our supply of the Mocha
was scanty, and what scribbler could live without coffee? In the use
of it Napoleon could fight, and Schiller could write. It is better than
the nectar which the Pagan deities used to drink, but it is not good
without sweetening. Honey or sugar is indispensable to the fragrance
of that berry. A Federal soldier called. The next time you come, said
I, bring me some sugar, if it be only as much as can be held in the palm
of my hand. At that he stepped out to his haversack, and on his return
he poured out some seven thimblesful of saccharine into a hand quite
cheerfully extended. You must have grown covetous, the Marylander
may say, for there was plenty in the oyster State. Not guilty so far as
my neighbor's house is concerned, but guilty on the specifications and
counts of coffee, <hi rend="italics">green</hi> tea and sugar. Does not Irving tell us what sort
of tea General Washington drank at Mt. Vernon, and at what hours he
called for the beverage. Rather minute, we think, on the part of the
Knickerbocker historian. Good taste demands that we should not go
too much into detail about trifles. But quite fortunately, the writer
had fallen into company with Captain Hazard, at the house of Dr.
Osmyn. He had been an editor in the Northwest, and was quite competent
to an historical discussion on the state of the country: and the
discussion was carried on in the finest humor. We then advised him,
when the war was over, to come down into Virginia; to get married,
live in a cottage in sight of the Blue Ridge. This advice so captivated
his fancy that he sent me twenty pounds of coffee and sugar.
Hurrah for Captain Hazard. But the reader may ask, have you not
erred by introducing into these papers your consort, sons and daughters?
Perhaps so, but then each one had to play his or her part in the
domestic drama. Every man thinks his own sons Solomons, and his
daughters queens of Sheba. What would the Vicar of Wakefield be
if we take out of it the wife and children of the old Vicar? Hope the
reader will pardon, even though he may condemn. For the present
week, adieu.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <pb id="balch32" n="32"/>
          <head>LETTER No. IX.</head>
          <p>Great want of coffee and sugar. The lady of the Manse kept hiding
the Mocha. You must not put away anything of the sort, I remarked
to my better half. Suppose, then, she replied, that company should
come in, how can we entertain our guests? In the following way: If
we lay up our stores Providence will not send us any more, but if we
use them, that Providence will know all about our destitution, and He
will be sure to provide for our wants. Agreed, said the fair daughter
of Eve. The last berry from Java shall be put into the mill, and then
some will come. But who will go for us to the Federal camp? The
writer had instructed his family to call the Northerners not Yankees,
but Feds, until we found out that they preferred the former designation.
Then my scruples immediately vanished. Go, said I, to the
youngest daughter of the household, go to the Yankee camp, and tell
General Newton to sell me some Java. You bear the name of Julia, a
name once held in respect among the war-like Romans. Let me
give you some advice. Keep your tongue. Let it be quiet as a bird
when asleep. Remember that you spoke to Captain Jay quite authoritatively.
I'll mind, said the lady, and stand in his presence like the
aspen you planted at Ringwood before Julia Ringwood was born. But
notice, I replied, one thing: A night or two since, Moseby made one
of his Spanish forays, and on that account Gen. Newton may look at
you as sternly as Joseph on his goat-herd brethren. Speak to him
softly and persuasively in the rich silver tones that should always
characterize a Manse, where Siloa's brook ought to murmur by day and
by night. Start. The cream-colored pony is at the rack, and if you
evince the milk of human kindness we shall certainly skim off something
better than milk. My neighbors say that the owner of the
Manse knows no more about human nature than Dominie Sampson
who figures in Guy Mannering, or the preacher that Sir W. Scott
represents as asking after the health of his parishioners, when the
objects of inquiry had been twenty years in their graves, or a mouse
that will certainly be caught in the trap of the Old Capitol. Be off  -  
be off  -  </p>
          <lg type="verse">
            <l>And through the pines the lady went,</l>
            <l>On getting Mocha, firmly bent.</l>
          </lg>
          <p>Newton was in his marque when the General Ambassadress presented
herself, arrayed in her hazel eyes and ruby cheeks, set off by a parcel
of smiles. My sire, General, wishes your permit to purchase at the
commissary store a little Java, Mocha, Brazil or even Liberia coffee.
In a few hours  -  say twenty-four in number  -  he will be three score
years and ten, and we wish to celebrate his birth-day, not in Jamaica
or Burgundy, or even in bad Falermar, or the weak wines of Switzerland,
but in a liquid more harmless than any drink ever made out of
<pb id="balch33" n="33"/>
Athenian currant. Do you know, said the General, that but yesternight,
Moseby made a dash on our camp and stole fourteen horses.
We have so heard, said the Roman Julia, but he probably conceited
that they were wild horses running on the Western prairies. Besides,
when that was done, we who live at the Manse were asleep in our
hammocks. Moseby must be a kind of somnambulist. He seems to
mount, ride and fight in his sleep, and no man can be responsible when
unconscious of what he is about. Your father, you say, is above the
military age. Long ago, General, long ago; but were he young as
Adam before his fall, he would not in nine hundred years engage in
war. He is not an Esau roaming in quest of game, but a plain man
dwelling in tents, and like Isaac, he often goes forth to meditate at
evening-tide. Is the old man well? said the General. Quite hale and
hearty. He can still walk off his five miles; but sends me because no
Knight of La Mancha can deny a few berries to a lady. But don't you
harbor Moseby? No, General. He called one night, but we could not
force him into our quiet haven. He seemed to be asleep, but in his
dreaming he spurred his horse, and the steed flew away like the one
mentioned in the Persian Tales. Besides, my sister Mary had been to
camp in Fairfax, and on her coming out she met the Major, who
threatened to serve her as Mary, the Queen of Scots, was served, if she
would not tell him the position of your pickets. But she refused on a
point of honor, and the Major fell into a nap, and she passed on without
being sent to Lochlevin Castle or decapitated. He menaced me in
the same way, but Julia Ringwood would not have told on your
pickets, even had the Major wielded the club of Hercules, or strung the
bow of Powhatan, or held the sword of Wellington flashing in her hazel
peepers. We must entertain the Yankees, because if we don't they
will take what they choose. The Confederates, too, are armed, and we
are before them like so many trembling humming birds. They can
say to us, get that zether  -  put on your thimble and make
its wires sound out a Tyrolese air, or go to that piano and give us the
Bonnie Blue Flag, or Bruce's Address to the Scots, or the Marseilles
Hymn. You know, General, that we ladies catch beaus more by our
music than by our looks, and it would be hard to deny us a chance.
True, my sister is involved in Hebrew Paradigms, Algebraic equations
and Conic sections. She will never be satisfied till she quadrate the
circle, or, like Mary Somerville, understand the Mechanique Celeste of
La Place. Therefore, in the twenty-two years she has lived we never
heard her say beau once; but as for me, were a handsome one like
Adonis to propose he might be accepted, after due consideration. Not
very anxious, however, till the right one come. But don't you think,
said the General, that the deeds of Moseby would justify us in laying
waste Virginia? Never, never, replied the lady. The true hero is
content with the sword. He never flies to the torch. You were born
in Virginia. You must love her twin capes, broad valleys, blue mountains,
her unrivaled law-givers and her inspiring legends. Would you
turn out mothers and children to the storm, and old men to the
<pb id="balch34" n="34"/>
raging tempests? Every Athenian wore a gold grasshopper in the
button-hole of his coat to intimate that he jumped up from classic soil.
Can Virginians do less than they who forced Socrates to drink the
hemlock when they ought to have feasted him on the honey of Hymettus?
Attack Moseby, but not our matrons and damsels. Here the
eyes of the General were somewhat moistened. You are quite eloquent.
No, said the lady; not the least pretension in that way commonly, but
when pleading for a Java-less father I can talk as earnestly as did
Jeanie Deans to Queen Caroline. We must celebrate his birth-day  -  
and surely you don't wish it done in coffee made out of rye, wheat, or
John Barleycorn. Come, General, grant the boon we crave. My
tongue is tired It has talked long enough to have gained all the
gums of Arabia, the poppies of Turkey, the barks of Quito, and the
aromatics of Borneo, instead of a few berries. Now, at this stage of the
affair, who should appear but Col. Bankhead. He had overheard the
diplomatic colloquy like a curious Erasmus, though born in Fredericksburg
and not at Rotterdam. General, said the young friend, you are a
man who listens to argument, and then yields to conviction. Such is
the mark of a wise commander. The father of this young lady is known
to my Colonelship in the following way: In 1840, he officiated for
eight or nine moons among the crags of Fredericksburg, and on one
occasion he preached from the text  -  “I shall die in my rest.” The
Mocha is indispensable to the comfort of his nest, and if he die without
it we may be accessory to his premature demise. True, Gen. Grant
has ordered a tight blockade, but he is not like Wellington, an iron-hearted
Duke. His peepers are often suffused with tears, and the
application before us, from a tearful lady, would melt an Osceola or
Tecumseh. Let us not be impracticable, for secession was engendered
among the impracticables of New England during the time of the
embargo, and then adopted by those of South Carolina; and the
putting of it down is likely to cost us banks of money and scores of
lives. Allow me to assure you, General, that his Reverence of the
Manse is a harmless man. When in romantic Fredericksburg he had
a cushioned-chair in Charles Wellford's store, and with his ankles resting
on a ledger he talked about various things; such as the currant
bushes of Athens with Menœos a Greek; and then about the flowers in
the vales of Spiraz and Cashmere, though there was neither Persian
nor Hindoo in the place; and then about the Bridge of Sighs at
Venice; the marble palaces of Genoa; the Gonfaloniers of Florence  -  
then about the Great Mogul  -  the Ghauts of the Himalayah, Chinese
junks, et cetera. But, said the General, didn't he shoot over the heads
of his hearers? He did; but that arose from his aversion to killing
any body. Every man's hand is for him, but his against no man. He
is not an Arab. We must not send him to Babylon to hear the shriek
of the bittern and the cry of the cormorant, and like Nebuchadnezzar
to browse on Chaldean grass. Does he never simplify his talk, asked
the General. Yes, his discourse runs carelessly about the feet when he
wants us to trample down error; and he has had a skirmish with
<pb id="blach35" n="35"/>
Abbott about his calling Napoleon a great man. He regards the Corsican
as a pickpocket, but Wellington as having restored his plunderings
to the purses of European kings. But he keeps his politics subrosa,
for he has been menaced alike with the Carroll and the Libby. I
can't remain mum any longer, said the lady. Colonel, your speech was
as sweet as if a hogshead of sugar had spoken, though it came out of a
head, the bank of which is rich in tender, beautiful, truthful, historical
thoughts. Young lady, said the General, go and buy what you want,
whispering at the same time upon the tympanum of Bankhead's ear,
“put her money into the mouth of her sack.” So the fair one came
ambling to the rack of the Manse about sundown. On leaving the
camp she was accosted by an officer bearing a sugar-dish. The lordly
dish, he remarked, is the property of Uncle Sam, but the contents are
my own. Please, said the lady, wrap it in a Washington Chronicle or
in Bennett's Herald, and then it can be carried in my hand. I can take
the sugar in my right hand, and, like Lord Raglan guide my steed
with the left. Wish that General Newton, Colonel Bankhead and
yourself could come up and help us to celebrate the seventieth birthday
of my father. We would take no denial, but that <sic corr="wizard">wizzard</sic> Moseby is
in the saddle. You sent infantry after him through our farm. Do
you think that cavaliers can be caught by snails. The officer laughed.
Conclusion next time.</p>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="letter">
          <head>LETTER No. X.</head>
          <p>Lieutenant Miller came to my house, bringing some music, which he
had purchased either in Washington or Baltimore. The young ladies
were quite thankful, as the pieces he brought were new. It seems
strange, that both Federal officers and privates always preferred the
performance of secession songs. The Star Spangled Banner was, certainly
at a discount; but its being below par, might have arisen from want of
novelty, for it has been in vogue since the war of 1812. The writer
has studied throughout these papers to conceal his politics; otherwise
he might say that secession pieces were played with a little more spirit,
and patriotism for the time being, may have been sacrificed to the gratification
which skill is sure to produce. And then so many of the soldiers
were from abroad, that German airs and Italian duets were
quite acceptable, together with pieces from Spain or Hibernia. The
Lieutenant was devoted to the piano; and, indeed, fondness for music
was far more a characteristic of the Northerners than the Southerners.
Lieutenant, said I, you have been in several battles, and did you stand
up to the fight like an Egyptian pyramid? Can a pyramid run, he
archly replied. Jackson flanked us at Chancellorville, and we put off
in a hurry, officers and all. It was impossible to stand his battery.
He was accompanied by an Irishman, who said in my presence that
Napoleon First was a great man. This fired me immediately; but in
<pb id="balch36" n="36"/>
planting my batteries the Lieutenant suddenly rose and said he must
go, though pressed to remain for tea. But he persevered. They had
not been gone more than three minutes before two Confederates, not
mounted, but armed, approached the Manse. We then rejoiced at the
going, not wishing that my premises should be moistened by a drop of
blood, though the dew of Hermon is perfectly welcome to fall over the
whole of my farm. Those fine steeds which the Federals rode might
have tempted the Confederates to a skirmish, perhaps on the floor of
the Manse, and the kitchen darkies would have been alarmed. One of
these darkies was named Beauregard, not by the lord or lady of the
Manse, but by his mother. My proclivities not to be known.</p>
          <p>The anniversary of my seventieth birth-day had arrived. The family
had been in the habit, for many years, of noticing the day, but the
writer never cared much about Christmas trees, or rustic collations, or
family meetings, so pleasing to the taste of many persons. But three
score years and ten make quite an era in the frail life of any man. It
was my wish, however, to postpone the affair until peace should come,
in hopes that if life were spared another year, the very unimportant
day could then be remembered, under more propitious auspices. But
before rising, my young ladies came into my chamber, saying: as this
is your natal day, we wish you to appear in Yankee dress. We have
already prayed that you may live as long as Parr of London, or Jenkins
of Lincoln, or the white headed Methuselah. Yankee dress, I replied,
when only half awake. Why, the Confederates will send me off
to Belle Isle if they catch me in such a costume. There are none of
them about at present. Moseby is up in the mountains, and the Black.
Horse are scouting on the Rapid Ann, and the Provost-Marshal at Catlett's
has sent you a heap of things. They are laid on the chairs, and
its time to rise. But one of you must stop and explain the articles.
Well, then, here's a felt hat sent by a New Hampshire man, and the
boots that Bundy gave; or you can decide between the shoes which
Alexander brought, and those of Col. Le Duc; and here are pants,
waistcoat, and coat; the last without a seam, and presented by a Yankee
surgeon. They will answer, I replied, for the exterior  -  but the
under-garments. Here, then, are four or five of the affairs about which
Tom Hood wrote a song, and a bundle of socks out of which you can
choose. They came from Lowell, where Gen. Butler lives, and where
little pale-faced girls work sixteen hours a day. Sorry to hear it. Poor
things, for ebony Beauregard won't work sixteen seconds. Was always
opposed to excessive industry. And here, too, are several stocks. Now
dress and appear like Solomon in all your glory, as he did on his gala
days. The morning had worn away imperceptibly to a sleeper, and
we had scarcely risen, before a runaway couple had entered the Manse.
We want to be married, said the groom. At that Cassius Carter stepped
forward as groomsman, and presented the license. Why this is not
a printed license? Don't print it these times, he replied. The clerk
wrote it with a pencil instead of a pen. Stand up then; and the bride
was first on the tapis. They were in a hurry, and off immediately.
<pb id="balch37" n="37"/>
Happy to say the two families that had quarreled about the match, had
a great making up next day, for what's the use of crying over that
which can't be undone. Handed the fee to the lady of the Manse, ten
dollars, partly in Confederate money, greenbacks, fractional currency
and specie. All worth something at the time. Spent several hours in
ruminating on my boyhood, when every thing about Georgetown, D. C.,
looked green to the eye, and though not a poet, actually wrote forty lines,
expressive of thankfulness for all the way in which my gracious Lord
had led me; lo, these seventy years in the wilderness, and not without
a hope of soon reaching that paradise, one of whose flowers has never
been agitated, nor one of its leaves rustled by the pestilential breath of
war. But Mary Landon and Julia Ringwood now entered the parlor
with a bowl of the Java, on which the cream was floating quite as prettily
as the cork of an angler. Each one of you, black and white, said
I, may take a cup; but this bowl is for my special use. So we all enjoyed
the Java as if we had been at the table of St. Cloud, in the time
of Napoleon, the great coffee drinker. But, said I, did not Ella Edmonds,
the rebel, and Sarah Ruby, the Union, each send me a bottle of
blackberry wine? They did, but they are locked up, said the lady of
the Manse, who is great on temperance. Remember, she continued, in
your picturesque voyage sent to Dr. Reese, that after the Black Bird
escaped out of the Sea of Alcohol, the ship entered Wine Sea. Oh,
that was a sea made out of Burgundy, Oporto, Talernian, Madeira, and
not blackberries culled from Prince William fields. Blackberries can
never prevent a man from counting the horns of the moon. Didn't 
Mrs. Osmyn, from Jersey, send me four bottles, and Charlotte Mitchell
three, and Irene Leach two, and Mrs. Green five. Don't all the religious
papers exhort us to make blackberry wine for the promotion of
temperance. Unlock, or else people will say that you are as hard to
manage as was Mrs. John Wesley, in England. It is my wish to drink
the health of Gen. Lee. Then you politics will be known. No, my politics
are not pinned to the sleeve of Gen. Lee, but he is your cousin. Whilst he
was a captain, we never heard you claim kin with him; but now its
cousin Lee. So we remembered the general, and the servants went off,
wishing old master many happy years to come. A Highland chief,
arrayed in his right-angled plaid cap and plume, never felt happier
than the owner of the Prince William Manse, on the day to which
allusion has been made. The bagpipe, however, was not present at the
entertainment, for my enjoyment of music is not remarkably vivid.</p>
          <p>A preacher called to forewarn me, that my arrest might take place at
noon. Didn't believe one word of the marvelous story. But in the
event of its being true, the writer resolved to take along with him the
history of his times, and continue it in the Old Capitol, remembering
that Sir Walter Raleigh wrote the History of the World in the Tower
of London, and Bunyan, his Pilgrim's Progress in the Bedford prison.
The lady of the Manse was requested to fold up a few articles of wearing
apparel. The minister who took such an interest in my welfare,
was about skedaddling to Richmond, but it was not in vain that Nehemiah
<pb id="balch38" n="38"/>
left on record the following words, “Shall such a man as I flee?”
Never, whilst the temple of God is to be built. But about noon, the
ebonies reported the rapid approach of two Federal officers. They were
descending the declivity of a hill, which lies to the east of the Manse;
and they dismounted in a twinkle after coming to the rack. Draw
chairs, gentlemen. Lieutenant Zimmerman, said the younger of the
twain. Are you not of Swiss descent, Lieutenant, probably the grandson
of some Zurich Burgomaster, and the Burgomasters are looked upon
as an order of nobility in the land of Wilhelm Tell. My reason for
asking you, is as follows. In a decade of letters by Ulrich Bodmer,
which appeared in a Richmond paper, and purporting to be written
from the Bear city of Berne, mention is made of an author, who published
a book on Solitude, and afterwards became physician to the King
of Hanover. Not a doubt of your being a collateral relative of that
distinguished man. It may be so, the Lieutenant replied. And you
seem to be all alone as Zimmerman used to be, among the Bernese rocks.
Yes, Mary Landon and Julia Ringwood are from home. My son, William
Cowper, is in the Black Horse, and my other sons, Charles Carter
and Robert Monro, are in Forrest's Legion, to the Southwest. But
hope you will both dine with me, and you will then see the lady of the
Manse, a person worth seeing. Understand, Lieutenant, that you are
the arresting officer. Just so, he replied, and it is a most unpleasant
office, but a soldier is obliged to obey his orders. It need not be so to
you, I rejoined, for being an officer you can resign. Resign, then, forthwith,
and all men will hold you in the highest esteem. Don't you
know, he remarked, that we own this part of Virginia. Col. Pierce, I
answered, holds Manassas, but Moseby seems to dispute his possession,
and Jackson in three days may dislodge him from his stronghold. Never,
never, he answered, quite in haste. But do you think he is any
where north of the Rappahannock? Don't know, but he seemed to be
pluripresent in the Valley, and perhaps that pluripresence will not forsake
him on the east of the Ridge. Dinner was announced. Gentlemen,
it is a war dinner, but warriors like Marion, ought to get used to
such repasts. But we can give you a bowl of coffee, and you can choose
between the Mocha and the Java. Glad to see you, gentlemen, said
the lady of the Manse; but it seems to me, that instead of coming to
the war, it would have been vastly better that you were both leading at
home a lowly and devout life, feasting all the time on the sweet and
rich promises of the Bible. War illustrates that solemn declaration.
What is your life? It is a flower that cometh up in the morning: but
in the evening it is cut down and withereth. We are not Christians,
they replied. But you ought to be, she rejoined. Were you disciples
of the Saviour, you would lose your taste for war; and if not, you have
no time for such a dangerous pursuit, unless, like Mohammed, you believe
that upon falling in battle you are in consequence translated into
paradise. That is not our creed. Rejoiced to hear it, replied their
interlocutrix; but they rose from the table and took a respectful leave.
Present, said I, my kind regards to Col. Pierce, and tell him that tomorrow,
<pb id="balch39" n="39"/>
at the hour of eleven, A. M., it is my intention to preach near
his camp. Let him reduce his charges against me to writing, and let
the paper be endorsed with three hours' allowed for the defence. Let
your file of men arrive in time to hear the sermon. The writer went,
and soldiers came, but each one was mum about my arrest. We politely
invited them to repeat their visit at my next appointment, and they
gave me a cordial grasp of the hand as they rode off to their camp, and
this was the last of the rumor about my arrest. But precisely in three
days Jackson was thundering at Manassas. Col. Pierce escaped to
Fairfax, and my friend Zimmerman was taken prisoner, and sent to
Libby. It made me sad as he went by Greenwich, but he bore up like
a man in his adverse fortune. We hope he may prosper.</p>
          <p>Visited Bristoe, which is four miles from the Manse, where soldiers
were laying, who were wounded in the skirmish between Ewell and
Hooker. It was a mournful sight. Dr. Strickler was in attendance as
a surgeon. He was from Luray in the County of Page. A handsome
young lady was aiding the Doctor in nursing the mangled victims of
war. So the lady and surgeon made up the match, and subsequently
called on me to tie the knot. This was done at Brentsville, on a pleasant
morning, just after breakfast. The writer, before the ceremony,
waited on Col. Gill, the Federal officer in command, and asked him if
he had ever seen a Virginny wedding? He replied negatively. Then,
said I, the minister has always the right to invite a guest. So come
along, and make yourself at home. The wedding party set off for the
Blue Ridge immediately after the refreshments common on such joyful
occasions, and the writer returned through Brentsville to the Manse.
Poor Brentsville,
<q direct="unspecified"><lg><l>Whose roofless homes, a sad remembrance bring,</l><l>Of what its gentle people did befall:</l></lg></q>
for we saw lawyers without offices, doctors without medicines, ministers
without Churches, and women and children without any shelter but the
sky. Shades of George Fox and William Penn, what a sight. How
pensive and appalling to the man who longs for the time when the lion
and the lamb shall repose in the same shade, and when warriors shall
spur their steeds into olive groves, and not into Aceldemas.</p>
          <p>It is well known after the battle of<sic corr="Gettysburg"> Gettysburgh</sic>, 
in Adams County,
Pa., that Gen. Meade advanced on the south of Rappahannock. He was
compelled to fall back on his ramparts at Centreville. At that time
Lee's army passed us at quite a short distance from the Manse. Gen.
Stuart was a man of fine-commanding presence, and upon making myself
known, found him remarkably polite, but he hurried on, for a battle
was being fought in the front. But the chaplains, of course, kept out
of the fray. They had gone on with the army, but hearing that the
author of the Picturesques and the Decads was left in the rear, returned.
We will call the roll, though at present they cannot answer to their
names. Parris of Norfolk, Methodist Protestant; Garland, Methodist
South; Hughes of North Carolina; Voss of Amherst; Hopkins of
<pb id="balch40" n="40"/>
Berkeley; Kennedy of Alabama. The four last were Presbyterians.
Come, brethren, and spend the night. The manse is the very place for
chaplains. The hours glided imperceptibly away. Before retiring, the
Methodist South, gave us a truly devout prayer, and in the morning the
Methodist Protestant did the same thing. Parris remarked to me: You
turn out to be a smaller man than I expected. We have traveled with
you from Japan to Rotterdam, and sundry other places, and thought
that you must be somewhat robust to encounter so much fatigue. Oh,
said I, Marco Polo was not a large man, though a very large wanderer.
My person is the <hi rend="italics">finest</hi> in Prince William. Were it a little more so,
nothing of me would be left. How much do you weigh? About ninety-nine
and three-fourths of a pound. Come, lets be off to camp, said
Hughes and Garland, and the writer walked with them to Gen. Ewell's
residence, but the General was with the army.</p>
          <p>To conclude these recollections. There are materials for another
Decade, but at present it may be wise to stop. There is nothing in the
character of Addison which commands my admiration so unreservedly
as his gratitude. And in closing these reminiscences, it is ornamental to
thank my Creator for all His goodness. He often planted a hedge
around me and mine, during the war; but the hedge often became laden
with flowers, and some wicket-gate crowned with blossoms, was often
opened, by which to escape into the green pastures of our Heavenly
Shepherd. William Cowper and Charles Carter received no wound
during the war, though under them three horses were killed, and three
more were killed under Robert Monroe, my eldest son. The last was
wounded either at Fort Donelson, or Shiloh, but as the ball did not produce
either a simple or compound fracture, the wound will not affect
his standing at the Memphis bar. Under a furlough from Forest, Charlie
came in once to see his mother, after an absence of years. Great was
our joy at his arrival. In the review of these incidents, my heart glows
with thankfulness, but not without sympathy for the multitude of mothers
and sisters in our land who refuse to be comforted. May they all
seek and find the balm of Gilead.</p>
        </div2>
      </div1>
    </body>
    <back>
      <div1 type="introduction">
        <pb id="balch41" n="41"/>
        <p>Reference was made in my preceding letters to several poetical lines
which were written in commemoration of the writer's seventieth birthday.
The following are the lines:</p>
      </div1>
      <div1 type="poem">
        <lg type="stanza">
          <l>My heart inspire, oh, Lord, with gratitude,</l>
          <l>Throughout this day, in all its round of hours!</l>
          <l>Recall each hill-side slope and copse of wood,</l>
          <l>From which were cull'd my knots of school-boy flowers.</l>
        </lg>
        <lg type="stanza">
          <l>Remind me, too, of when my footsteps strayed</l>
          <l>'Mid poplar walks 'round Nassau's classic Hall!</l>
          <l>And the dense beech-trees cast their summer shade,</l>
          <l>Ere evening bade its vesper star to fall.</l>
        </lg>
        <lg type="stanza">
          <l>Remind me, too, of early comrades gone,</l>
          <l>Who play'd with me till yonder sun had set,</l>
          <l>And yet till darkness came, we lingered on,</l>
          <l>Then hurried home with dews of evening wet.</l>
        </lg>
        <lg type="stanza">
          <l>Prompt me to think of travels far and wide,</l>
          <l>On land or wave  -  o'er sundry hills and plains  -  </l>
          <l>On waters rough  -  on streams that smoothly glide  -  </l>
          <l>Beneath Thy power, that o'er this vast world reigns.</l>
        </lg>
        <lg type="stanza">
          <l>And why not think of birds whose lovely plumes</l>
          <l>Gleamed through the air, or flashed from forest trees?</l>
          <l>All gone! although they sang in sylvan rooms,</l>
          <l>Unlock'd for them by summer's shining keys.</l>
        </lg>
        <lg type="stanza">
          <l>And in the niches of my chequered years,</l>
          <l>No brighter, purer, sweeter days have shone</l>
          <l>Than Sabbath days, when all exempt from cares,</l>
          <l>And