Mary
Preston went back to Mulberry with me from Columbia. She found a man there tall
enough to take her in to dinner —Tom Boykin, who is six feet four, the same
height as her father. Tom was very handsome in his uniform, and Mary prepared
for a nice time, but he looked as if he would so much rather she did not talk
to him, and he set her such a good example, saying never a word.
Old
Colonel Chesnut came for us. When the train stopped, Quashie, shiny black, was
seen on his box, as glossy and perfect in his way as his blooded bays, but the
old Colonel would stop and pick up the dirtiest little negro I ever saw who was
crying by the roadside. This ragged little black urchin was made to climb up
and sit beside Quash. It spoilt the symmetry of the turn-out, but it was a
character touch, and the old gentleman knows no law but his own will. He had a
biscuit in his pocket which he gave this sniffling little negro, who proved to
be his man Scip's son.
I was
ill at Mulberry and never left my room. Doctor Boykin came, more military than
medical. Colonel Chesnut brought him up, also Teams, who said he was down in
the mouth. Our men were not fighting as they should. We had only pluck and
luck, and a dogged spirit of fighting, to offset their weight in men and
munitions of war. I wish I could remember Teams's words; this is only his idea.
His language was quaint and striking — no grammar, but no end of sense and good
feeling. Old Colonel Chesnut, catching a word, began his litany, saying, “Numbers
will tell,” “Napoleon, you know,” etc., etc.
At
Mulberry the war has been ever afar off, but threats to take the silver came
very near indeed — silver that we had before the Revolution, silver that Mrs.
Chesnut brought from Philadelphia. Jack Cantey and Doctor Boykin came back on
the train with us. Wade Hampton is the hero.
Sweet
May Dacre. Lord Byron and Disraeli make their rosebuds Catholic; May Dacre is
another Aurora Raby. I like Disraeli because I find so many clever things in
him. I like the sparkle and the glitter. Carlyle does not hold up his hands in
holy horror of us because of African slavery. Lord Lyons1 has gone
against us. Lord Derby and Louis Napoleon are silent in our hour of direst
need. People call me Cassandra, for I cry that outside hope is quenched. From
the outside no help indeed cometh to this beleaguered land.
_______________
1 Richard, Lord Lyons, British
minister to the United States from 1858 to 1865.
SOURCE:
Mary Boykin Chesnut, Edited by Isabella D. Martin and Myrta Lockett
Avary, A Diary From Dixie, p. 134-6
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