An old gentleman stopped here just now in a carriage and
asked to see me. Such a sad, sick old man! He said his name was Caldwell, and
that passing through East Feliciana, Mrs. Flynn had asked him to deliver a
message to us. Had we heard from our brothers? I told him the message from Mr.
Bell. He commenced crying. There was one of them, he said, who got hurt. I held
my breath and looked at him. He cried more still, and said yes, it was Gibbes —
in the hand — not dangerous — but — Here I thought he meant to tell me worse;
perhaps he was dead; but I could not speak, so he went on saying Lydia and the
General had gone on to Richmond instantly, and had probably reached there
before today. He took so long to tell it, and he cried so, that I was alarmed,
until I thought perhaps he had lost one of his own sons; but I dared not ask
him. Just then one of the horses fell down with sunstroke, and I begged the old
gentleman to come in and rest until they could raise the horse; but he said no,
he must go on to the river. He looked so sick that I could not help saying he
looked too unwell to go beyond, and I wished he would come in. But he burst
into tears, saying, “Yes, my child, I am very, very sick, but I must go on.”
Poor old man, with his snow-white beard!
SOURCE: Sarah Morgan Dawson, A Confederate Girl's
Diary, p. 134-5
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