Another such day, and there is the end of me! Charlie
decided to send Lilly and the children into the country early to-morrow
morning, and get them safely out of this doomed town. Mother, Miriam, and I
were to remain here alone. Take the children away, and I can stand whatever is
to come; but this constant alarm, with five babies in the house, is too much
for any of us. So we gladly packed their trunks and got them ready, and then
news came pouring in.
First a negro man just from the country told Lilly that our
soldiers were swarming out there, that he had never seen so many men. Then Dena
wrote us that a Mrs. Bryan had received a letter from her son, praying her not
to be in Baton Rouge after Wednesday morning, as they were to attack to-morrow.
Then a man came to Charlie, and told him that though he was on parole, yet as a
Mason he must beg him not to let his wife sleep in town to-night; to get her
away before sunset. But it is impossible for her to start before morning.
Hearing so many rumors, all pointing to the same time, we began to believe
there might be some danger; so I packed all necessary clothing that could be
dispensed with now in a large trunk for mother, Miriam, and me, and got it
ready to send out in the country to Mrs. Williams. All told, I have but eight
dresses left; so I'll have to be particular. I am wealthy, compared to what I
would have been Sunday night, for then I had but two in my sack, and now I have
my best in the trunk. If the attack comes before the trunk gets off, or if the
trunk is lost, we will verily be beggars; for I pack well, and it contains
everything of any value in clothing.
The excitement is on the increase, I think. Everybody is
crazy to leave town.
SOURCE: Sarah Morgan Dawson, A Confederate Girl's
Diary, p. 124-5
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