Meridian Hill, Washington,
Aug. 1st, 1861.
Dear Cousin Lou:
I am seated in my tent, the rain is pouring in torrents, and
I am at leisure to think of friends at home. You see whom I was first
remembering, not having forgotten the kind letter which Mr. Houston brought me
from Thompsonville, when I was somewhere over in Virginia. I thank you so much
for all the dear, kind expressions of love your letter contained.
Oh! Ah! Here come about twenty-five men or more with
complaints, and as the Captain is away, I must straighten up, and play the part
of Magistrate. Oh Olympian Jove! Oh Daniel risen to judgment! The malcontents
have been severally coaxed, wheedled, threatened, and sent about their
business, and the Centurion is once again at leisure. A pleasant thing is this
exercise of power, especially when commands can be given in the quietest manner
possible, and yet to feel that from your judgment there can be no appeal. In
fact, dear Cousin Lou, imagine me when the Captain is away, performing the
paternal function towards some hundred grown up children. Ah me! I am growing
venerable and cares are weighing heavily upon me.
But I must not forget that I am a veteran soldier now. Poor
Horace! How I shall assume superior airs, tell him, when I return home! In fact
when, one of these days, I get a furlough and am surrounded by friends, how I
shall exercise my soldier's privilege of drawing the long bow! In my first
battle, of course, I performed the most remarkable deeds of daring. I shall not
pretend to tell you how many Secessionists I killed! Between ourselves though,
in all privacy, I will confess that the fearful weapon with which I struck such
terror in the hearts of the enemy, was a toy wooden sword, captured by one of
our men from a secession boy-baby. In the great battle of Manassas, holding the
occasion to be one of greater moment, I made the charge armed with a ramrod,
which I picked up on the way thither! I acknowledge I found the work hotter
than I anticipated in the latter engagement, and mean in future to go armed in
regulation style. The truth of the matter was, that being ordered suddenly to
march from our pleasant encampment in Georgetown, I was found unprepared, and
must either stay behind, or trust to my pistol in case of emergency. I
preferred the latter, and the kind Providence has brought me safely through the
fiery ordeal, through which we all had to pass. What think you, dear Cousin Lou
of our miserable defeat? It seems hard, as we lost many good men out of our
Regiment on that bloody day. I saw many things never to be forgotten. No matter
for sickening details though. The ground lost must be recovered at any cost. We
have lost out of the 800 who went into the engagement about 150 in killed and
wounded, besides some fifty more numbered among the missing. Hardship and
exposure have caused much sickness in the camp. Most of the liquor-dealing
Captains and Lieutenants who commanded before the battle, have resigned, many
others are dead or in the hands of the enemy — so I can give no very cheerful
picture of our camp at present. We are to be soon thoroughly reorganized, to be
cared for tenderly by the President and Secretary of War, to be recruited to
the army standard, and when once more discipline shall be enforced, we trust
that the 79th will be able to charge as gallantly as at Manassas, but that the
charge may result not in mere loss of life, but in glorious victory.
You would be much entertained, could you only see behind the
scenes, at the daring feats of individuals, which are passing the rounds of the
papers. A specimen is afforded by a story I read in the Herald of a
certain Captain who is reported to have repeatedly rallied the men of the 79th
and led them back to battle. Now the fact is that Captain never was within
three days journey of the battle, and moreover, at least ten days before the
engagement the Colonel threatened him with arrest should he dare to show
himself in the Regiment. Captain wrote the article himself, and had it
published. This is only an isolated example of the manner by which this war is
made to subserve the dirtiest of politicians. I have had no letter from Horace,
and but few from home since I left New-York. I suppose some of the letters
addressed to me, have been captured by the Secessionists, and have been perused
with the same gusto that we felt when a package of the enemy's letters fell
into our hands. Of course we had to read them to glean as far as possible the
state of political feeling in the South, and I blush to say we read with
special interest the tender epistles which fair South Carolina maidens penned
for the eye alone of South Carolina heroes. Think of such sacred pages being
polluted by the vulgar gaze of a parcel of peddling Yankees.
We learned some of the peculiarities of the Aborigines down
South from these epistles. We learned that the ladies are so modest that they
write of themselves with a little i — that all Southern babies send their papas
"Howdy" — that a certain perfidious —— ——— is “cortin the gall” of
one of the brave palmetto soldiers who is congratulated by his sister upon
having slain 3000 Yankees — that the ladies in the South are thirsting for the
blood of the Northern mercenaries, and, above all, penmanship, spelling and
composition showed that the greatest need of the South, is an army of Northern
Schoolmasters. Well, Cousin Lou, I must not write for ever, so good-bye. Love
to all in Enfield and in Pelham.
Very affectionately,
Wm. T. Lusk,
Lieut. 10th Co. 79th
Regiment, Washington.
SOURCE: William Chittenden Lusk, Editor, War Letters
of William Thompson Lusk, p. 63-6
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