Sent off my letters by an English gentleman, who was taking
despatches from Mr. Bunch to Lord Lyons, as the post-office is becoming a
dangerous institution. We hear of letters being tampered with on both sides.
Adams's Express Company, which acts as a sort of express post under certain
conditions, is more trustworthy; but it is doubtful how long communications
will be permitted to exist between the two hostile nations, as they may now be
considered.
Dined with Mr. Petigru, who had most kindly postponed his
dinner party till my return from the plantations, and met there General
Beauregard, Judge King, and others, among whom, distinguished for their esprit
and accomplishments, were Mrs. King and Mrs. Carson, daughters of my host.
The dislike, which seems innate, to New England is universal, and varies only
in the form of its expression. It is quite true Mr. Petigru is a decided
Unionist, but he is the sole specimen of the genus in Charleston, and he is
tolerated on account of his rarity. As the witty, pleasant old man trots down
the street, utterly unconscious of the world around him, he is pointed out
proudly by the Carolinians as an instance of forbearance on their part, and as
a proof, at the same time, of popular unanimity of sentiment.
There are also people who regret the dissolution of the
Union — such as Mr. Huger, who shed tears in talking of it the other night; but
they regard the fact very much as they would the demolition of some article
which never can be restored and reunited, which was valued for the uses it
rendered and its antiquity.
General Beauregard is apprehensive of an attack by the
Northern “fanatics” before the South is prepared, and he considers they will
carry out coercive measures most rigorously. He dreads the cutting of the
levees, or high artificial works, raised along the whole course of the Mississippi,
for many hundreds of miles above New Orleans, which the Federals may resort to
in order to drown the plantations and ruin the planters.
We had a good-humored argument in the evening about the
ethics of burning the Norfolk navy yard. The Southerners consider the
appropriation of the arms, moneys, and stores of the United States as rightful
acts, inasmuch as they represent, according to them, their contribution, or a
portion of it, to the national stock in trade. When a State goes out of the
Union she should be permitted to carry her forts, armaments, arsenals, &c,
along with her, and it was a burning shame for the Yankees to destroy the
property of Virginia at Norfolk. These ideas, and many like them, have the
merit of novelty to English people, who were accustomed to think there were
such things as the Union and the people of the United States.
SOURCE: William Howard Russell, My Diary North and
South, p. 136-7
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