The following day I started early, and performed my
pilgrimage to “the shrine of St. Washington,” at Mount Vernon, as a foreigner
on board called the place. Mr. Bancroft has in his possession a letter of the
General's mother, in which she expresses her gratification at his leaving the
British army in a manner which implies that he had been either extravagant in
his expenses or wild in his manner of living. But if he had any human frailties
in after life, they neither offended the morality of his age, nor shocked the
susceptibility of his countrymen; and from the time that the much maligned and
unfortunate Braddock gave scope to his ability, down to his retirement into
private life, after a career of singular trials and extraordinary successes,
his character acquired each day greater altitude, strength, and lustre. Had his
work failed, had the Republic broken up into small anarchical states, we should
hear now little of Washington. But the principles of liberty founded in the
original Constitution of the colonies themselves, and in no degree derived from
or dependent on the Revolution, combined with the sufferings of the Old and the
bounty of nature in the New World to carry to an unprecedented degree the
material prosperity, which Americans have mistaken for good government, and the
physical comforts which have made some States in the Union the nearest approach
to Utopia. The Federal Government hitherto “let the people alone” and they went
on their way singing and praising their Washington as the author of so much
greatness and happiness. To doubt his superiority to any man of woman born, is
to insult the American people. They are not content with his being great — or
even greater than the great: he must be greatest of all; — “first in peace, and
first in war.” The rest of the world cannot find fault with the assertion, that
he is “first in the hearts of his countrymen.” But he was not possessed of the
highest military qualities, if we are to judge from most of the regular
actions, in which the British had the best of it; and the final blow, when
Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, was struck by the arm of France, by
Rochambeau and the French fleet, rather than by Washington and his Americans.
He had all the qualities for the work for which he was designed, and is fairly
entitled to the position his countrymen have given him as the immortal czar of
the United States. His pictures are visible everywhere — in the humblest inn,
in the Minister's bureau, in the millionnaire's gallery. There are far more
engravings of Washington in America than there are of Napoleon in France, and
that is saying a good deal.
What have we here? The steamer which has been paddling down
the gentle current of the Potomac, here a mile and more in breadth, banked in
by forest, through which can be seen homesteads and white farm-houses, in the
midst of large clearings and corn-fields — has moved in towards a high bluff,
covered with trees, on the summit of which is visible the trace of some sort of
building — a ruined summer-house, rustic temple — whatever it may be; and the
bell on deck begins to toll solemnly, and some of the pilgrims
uncover their heads for a moment. The boat stops at a rotten, tumbledown little
pier, which leads to a waste of mud, and a path rudely cut through the
wilderness of briers on the hill-side. The pilgrims, of whom there are some
thirty or forty, of both sexes, mostly belonging to the lower classes of
citizens, and comprising a few foreigners like myself, proceed to climb this steep,
which seemed in a state of nature covered with primeval forest, and tangled
weeds and briers, till the plateau, on which stands the house of Washington and
the domestic offices around it, is reached. It is an oblong wooden house, of
two stories in height, with a colonnade towards the river face, and a small
balcony on the top and on the level of the roof, over which rises a little
paltry gazebo. There are two windows, a glass door at one end of the oblong,
and a wooden alcove extending towards the slave quarters, which are very small
sentry-box huts, that have been recently painted, and stand at right angles to
the end of the house, with dog-houses and poultry-hutches attached to them.
There is no attempt at neatness or order about the place; though the exterior
of the house is undergoing repair, the grass is unkempt, the shrubs untrimmed,
— neglect, squalor, and chicken feathers have marked the lawn for their own.
The house is in keeping, and threatens to fall to ruin. I entered the door, and
found myself in a small hall, stained with tobacco juice. An iron railing ran
across the entrance to the stairs. Here stood a man at a gate, who presented a
book to the visitors, and pointed out the notice therein, that “no person is
permitted to inscribe his name in this book who does not contribute to the
Washington Fund, and that any name put down without money would be erased.”
Notwithstanding the warning, some patriots succeeded in recording their names
without any pecuniary mulct, and others did so at a most reasonable rate. When
I had contributed in a manner which must have represented an immense amount of
Washingtoniolatry, estimated by the standard of the day, I was informed I could
not go up-stairs as the rooms above were closed to the public, and thus the
most interesting portion of the house was shut from the strangers. The lower
rooms presented nothing worthy of notice —some lumbering, dusty, decayed
furniture; a broken harpsichord, dust, cobwebs — no remnant of the man himself.
But over the door of one room hung the key of the Bastille.* The gardens, too, were tabooed; but through
the gate I could see a wilderness of neglected trees and shrubs, not unmingled
with a suspicion of a present kitchen-ground. Let us pass to the Tomb, which is
some distance from the house, beneath the shade of some fine trees. It is a
plain brick mausoleum, with a pointed arch, barred by an iron grating, through
which the light penetrates a chamber or small room containing two sarcophagi of
stone. Over the arch, on a slab let into the brick, are the words: “Within this
enclosure rest the remains of Gen. George Washington.” The fallen leaves which
had drifted into the chamber rested thickly on the floor, and were piled up on
the sarcophagi, and it was difficult to determine which was the hero's grave
without the aid of an expert, but there was neither guide nor guardian on the
spot. Some four or five gravestones, of various members of the family, stand in
the ground outside the little mausoleum. The place was most depressing. One
felt angry with a people whose lip service was accompanied by so little of
actual respect. The owner of this property, inherited from the “Pater Patriӕ,” has been abused in
good set terms because he asked its value from the country which has been so
very mindful of the services of his ancestor, and which is now erecting by slow
stages the overgrown Cleopatra's needle that is to be a Washington Monument
when it is finished. Mr. Everett has been lecturing, the Ladies' Mount Vernon
Association has been working, and every one has been adjuring everybody else to
give liberally; but the result so lately achieved is by no means worthy of the
object. Perhaps the Americans think it is enough to say — “Si monumentum quӕris,
circumspice" But, at all events, there is a St. Paul's round those
words.
On the return of the steamer I visited Fort Washington,
which is situated on the left bank of the Potomac. I found everything in a
state of neglect — gun-carriages rotten, shot piles rusty, furnaces tumbling to
pieces. The place might be made strong enough on the river front, but the rear
is weak, though there is low marshy land at the back. A company of regulars
were on duty. The sentries took no precautions against surprise. Twenty
determined men, armed with revolvers, could have taken the whole work; and, for
all the authorities knew, we might have had that number of Virginians and the
famous Ben McCullough himself on board. Afterwards, when I ventured to make a
remark to General Scott as to the carelessness of the garrison, he said: “A few
weeks ago it might have been taken by a bottle of whiskey. The whole garrison
consisted of an old Irish pensioner.” Now at this very moment Washington is
full of rumors of desperate descents on the capital, and an attack on the
President and his Cabinet. The long bridge across the Potomac into Virginia is
guarded, and the militia and volunteers of the District of Columbia are to be
called out to resist McCullough and his Richmond desperadoes.
_______________
* Since borrowed, it is supposed, by Mr. Seward, and handed
over by him to Mr. Stanton. Lafayette gave it to Washington; he also gave his
name to the Fort which has played so conspicuous a part in the war for liberty
— “La liberté des
deux mondes,” might well sigh if he could see his work, and what it has led to.
SOURCE: William Howard Russell, My Diary North and
South, p. 55-9
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