The Eutaw House is not a very good specimen of an American
hotel, but the landlord does his best to make his guests comfortable, when he
likes them. The American landlord is a despot who regulates his dominions by
ukases affixed to the walls, by certain state departments called “offices” and “bars,”
and who generally is represented, whilst he is away on some military,
political, or commercial undertaking, by a lieutenant; the deputy being, if
possible, a greater man than the chief. It requires so much capital to
establish a large hotel, that there is little fear of external competition in
the towns. And Americans are so gregarious that they will not patronize small
establishments. I was the more complimented by the landlord's attention this morning
when he came to the room, and in much excitement informed me the news of Fort
Sumter being bombarded by the Charleston batteries was confirmed, “And now,”
said he, “there's no saying where it will all end.” After breakfast I was
visited by some gentlemen of Baltimore, who were highly delighted with the
news, and I learned from them there was a probability of their State joining
those which had seceded. The whole feeling of the landed and respectable
classes is with the South. The dislike to the Federal Government at Washington
is largely spiced with personal ridicule and contempt of Mr. Lincoln. Your
Marylander is very tenacious about being a gentleman, and what he does not
consider gentlemanly is simply unfit for any thing, far less for place and authority.
The young draftsman, of whom I spoke, turned up this morning, having pursued me
from Washington. He asked me whether I would still let him accompany me. I
observed that I had no objection, but that I could not permit such paragraphs
in the papers again, and suggested there would be no difficulty in his
travelling by himself, if he pleased. He replied that his former connection
with a Black Republican paper might lead to his detention or molestation in the
South, but that if he was allowed to come with me, no one would doubt that he
was employed by an illustrated London paper. The young gentleman will certainly
never lose any thing for the want of asking. At the black barber's I was meekly
interrogated by my attendant as to my belief in the story of the bombardment.
He was astonished to find a stranger could think the event was probable. “De
gen'lemen of Baltimore will be quite glad ov it. But maybe it'll come bad after
all.” I discovered my barber had strong ideas that the days of slavery were drawing
to an end. “And what will take place then, do you think?” “Wall, sare, 'spose
colored men will be good as white men.” That is it. They do not understand what
a vast gulf flows between them and the equality of position with the white race
which most of those who have aspirations imagine to be meant by emancipation.
He said the town slave-owners were very severe and harsh in demanding larger
sums than the slaves could earn. The slaves are sent out to do jobs, to stand
for hire, to work on the quays and docks. Their earnings go to the master, who
punishes them if they do not bring home enough. Sometimes the master is content
with a fixed sum, and all over that amount which the slave can get may be
retained for his private purposes. Baltimore looks more ancient and respectable
than the towns I have passed through, and the site on which it stands is
undulating, so that the houses have not that flatness and uniformity of height
which make the streets of New York and Philadelphia resemble those of a toy
city magnified. Why Baltimore should be called the “Monumental City” could not
be divined by a stranger. He would never think that a great town of 250,000
inhabitants could derive its name from an obelisk cased in white marble to
George Washington, even though it be more than 200 feet high, nor from the
grotesque column called “Battle Monument,” erected to the memory of those who
fell in the skirmish outside the city in which the British were repulsed in
1814. I could not procure any guide to the city worth reading, and strolled
about at discretion, after a visit to the Maryland Club, of which I was made an
honorary member. At dark I started for Norfolk in the steamer “Georgiana.”
SOURCE: William Howard Russell, My Diary North and
South, p. 77-9
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