The Episcopal churches being closed, we went to the Rev. Dr.
Hoge's church. The rector was absent; he went off, to be in Confederate lines ;
but the Rev. Dr. Read, whose church is in ruins, occupied the pulpit.
Strange rumours are afloat to-night. It is said, and
believed, that Lincoln is dead, and Seward much injured. As I passed the house
of a friend this evening, she raised the window and told me the report. Of
course I treated it as a Sunday rumour; but the story is strengthened by the
way which the Yankees treat it. They, of course, know all about it, and
to-morrow's papers will reveal the particulars. I trust that, if true, it may
not be by the hand of an assassin, though it would seem to fulfil the warnings
of Scripture. His efforts to carry out his abolition theories have caused the
shedding of oceans of Southern blood, and by man it now seems has his blood
been shed. But what effect will it hare on the South? We may have much to fear.
Future events will show! This event has made us wild with excitement and
speculation.
General Lee has returned. He came unattended, save by his
staff — came without notice, and without parade; but he could not come
unobserved; as soon as his approach was whispered, a crowd gathered in his
path, not boisterously, but respectfully, and increasing rapidly as he advanced
to his home on Franklin Street, between 8th and 9th, where, with a courtly bow
to the multitude, he at once retired to the bosom of his beloved family. When I
called in to see his high-minded and patriotic wife, a day or two after the
evacuation, she was busily engaged in her invalid's chair, and very cheerful
and hopeful. “The end is not yet,” she said, as if to cheer those around her; “Richmond
is not the Confederacy.” To this we all most willingly assented, and felt very
much gratified and buoyed by her brightness. I have not had the heart to visit
her since the surrender, but hear that she still is sanguine, saying that “General
Lee is not the Confederacy,” and that there is “life in the old land yet.” He
is not the Confederacy; but our hearts sink within us when we remember that he
and his noble army are now idle, and that we can no longer look upon them as
the bulwark of our land. He has returned from defeat and disaster with the
universal and profound admiration of the world, having done all that skill and
valour could accomplish. The scenes at the surrender were noble and touching.
General Grant's bearing was profoundly respectful; General Lee's as courtly and
lofty as the purest chivalry could require. The terms, so honourable to all
parties, being complied with to the letter, our arms were laid down with
breaking hearts, and tears such as stoutest warriors may shed. “Woe worth the
day!”
SOURCE: Judith W. McGuire, Diary of a Southern
Refugee, During the War, p. 355-7
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