The free South. (Beaufort, S.C.) 1863-1864, November 19, 1864, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

THE VOLUME EL THE FREE SOUTH. PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT lATNBT, SOUTH CAROLINA. WHXB ft THOMPWH, Proprietor!. JMMt O* f|i>ni? Eilttr. TI I XI-Tvi Doluii par uan, ia tdnaea. *%a paataft ** ** Fan Seer a la tweaty aenta a year, Mkli ?lf?1. la a^nam aaJ ?.v k* mM .1 Ikli ee. Advertisements will bt Inserted at twenty cent* a Xne for eaeh insertion. Having Je* received a large assortment of new type. Mm, roles, etc., we are aow ready to execute order* fee OFFICIAL BLANKS, of every description. Also ail kinds of mercantile printing, sock as BILL HKAD6, OAKDS, CKKCULAB8, HANDBILLS, INVOICES, etc. Oar fedBtim am each that we are able to 111 orders npon r v? the shortest aetlee. SfTeaber E Iff hi! No day of all tbe yean gone by Race Booth Carolina was a State, Has horns each record to the sky Aa this, mad* op November eight! The record of a tbooaaad names, Inscribed en freedom's master-roll; As lftbahmg ooo teeled claims Of mm to Ufa sad tight, and soot. Tha ownership of aslf complete, Hod beep Eooessdai, aad a race With bands fhe> boond, and fettered fret, Bed hand at last He boor of grace. AM bolt tkooday! wbeo whips and stocks And mch grim rates of the pest An biddso by tha boDot-box, Whsrt Freedmsui onbooght votaa ancsst. fVowdday! end most aaspidoQs set! * H seels that other glorioas deed. The ptorlsumtfoo of a feci. IWopgh which o mattitude are freed. (banderol when the belle of time. ftMlovtMehMichtyqrapbocfa* Ami with ma iiwgj Nbdae IV ftoptot lOTcnifs totot roplisa .. h. a j. CONTRACTED. If lime has jet long jeers in store for me, I shell crash the flowers of menj springs beneeth xnj feet, before the impressions made bj two grand spectacles which I have witnessed, shall be erased from memory. It is e storj of two pictures I have looked on that I am about to tell, and tbej both appear so plainlj before me as I write that I alternately thrill with awe, and tremble with excitement, gazing first on the one, then on the other. Five years, and as many months ago, I % At ? i LI.L - - . ioo&ea on tat) ant?jomn wuiuu booiu mi have glided away as swift as a passing shadow. Years in which are blended the glad, wild notes of the march of joy, and the sad, sad strains of sorrow's dirge; yean which memory loves, and yet ofttimes dreads to linger over?adown whose vista I can look and see troop past the ghosts -of days which have been, when happiness and mirth and I linked arms together, and tripped along the fields of pleasure?and here and there I catch glimpses of gardens of roses, dotted with mart&e fauns and fairies, shadowy in cool grots?and then I listen?and caich? the soft tinkling notes of a merry girl's laughter, clear and bright as the silvery gosh of a crystal fountain ! How sweet is the dream! Anon, my steps beat time to the weary march of sorrow, and with a sad heart I wander in the avenues of the Past, and count the marble n^onuments of Mends flecking the green hills?and fragments of songs that nobody sings float by me, and parts of a mother's ?war*. The echoes of voices hushed long ago, coming book to me from the shadow-land dps*, cause me to feel like a wearied child to-night, and I could sit me down and weep, and with the tears I would sited the hand of the Recording Angel could, metbinks, blot seme sins from the ?ji - / * : FRE BEAUFORT, SOUTH CAROI page reserved for me! Ah! memory, what poignant pangs thou canst inflict? what sonny hours thou canst recall! I T> 1 W i i_ urn; l muni to my. story. A little over five years ago I found myself at the Island of St Helena. It was a beautiful night in May. Our ship had touched here to procure water, and its worthy, but unromantio skipper, decided that it was advisable to remain but two or three hours for the purpose of filling our tanks. There was no conveyance to take me to Napoleon's old grave, and as the distance thither was six miles or more from our landing point, it was an impossibility to walk it and return in season to leave with my ship. So, in despair and sullen grief, I abandoned my long contemplated visit to the spot where they laid him, and where now the willow bends weeping, and the Acacia keeps lonely vigil. We wandered through the principal street of the island town, and left the shore just as the setting sun threw his last rays on island and ocean?beautiful and changing as are the hues of the dying dolphin in his last agonies?or like the last ling nncrWja nf the Rwtn. the sweetest in | death. The water was like the neck of a do ve,. changing with purple and gold. The ship was lying lazily at anchor some distanoe off, and it gave us a long poll to reach her. The evening was sultry, bnt soon the start came out, and we forgot the oppressive heat in contemplating the i charms nature had woven around us. I j j sat watching that grand old rock, which ' had been made so famous?wrapped up in ihe gloom of its own solitude, and in whose long shadows we were lying, with mingled foelings of admiration and awe, it looked so black and threatening?a dense, dark mass. Deep silence reigned over alL The murmuring lips of Old Ocean were sealed by the hand of sleep, and scarce a sound issued from the fleet that had nestled under the island's lee. At long intervals we could catch the driD of the suspended i oar of some water loiterer, or the oomi plaining murmur of the surf would appeal to our sympathies as it told its story to the smooth pebbles ou the beaoh, or dashed against the rooks adown whose maimed and patient faces tears trickle forever. How beautiful the water looked, with the stars lingering like floating jewels on its bosom, mirrored as clear as in a glass. Soon great heavy clouds-came out and hung over the brow of the island, as if they had some dark sorrow to release there, or were about to pour thereon a dreadful vengeance--and then, I thought, the charm was to be dispelled, and instead of being gladdened by a spectacle of grandeur and beauty, we were to be fretted by a storm. But lo ! a change! The moon, the weloome moon, came out, and won her slow way with .milo nn a fV,<? VOW tJ\oA fit wauif on W/y ouiuei u|/ w w>u >v?j v. those black clouds, and then the picture he painted was beautiful beyond description ! She tipped them with a silver edge, she tipped the top of the rock island too with her silver wand, and as he gathered her radiance about her, and marched in triumph higher, still higher, on the dappled vault, like a queen followed by her glittering train?she chased away those clustering clouds which seemed like a black sorrow brooding there, and bathed island, and sea and ships with such a sweet and gentle light, and so soothing was the influence, that it seemed as if some Bright Being of a Better World were folding her dazzling wings around us. And now, how changed was the oene! The loae island, that had looked so grim and fierce, seemed graven E SOI iINA, NOVEMBER 19, 1864. in silver, and the silent sea and the slumbering fleet were alike lit up by the tremulous glow. How grand, how sub lime the spectacle f I could fancy anything that night My mind seemed a sea of music, whereon floated golden imaginings, brilliant and beautiful. Distant voices took love's tones, and a song borne away on the night breeze, seemed the strains of a lover's lute beneath his lady's balcony, as she leaned out beauteous and bright?as Juliet to Borneo?making night day, and threw him the rose! Wrapped in admiration, 1 feared to breathe lest I should break the spell! And ther fancy took wing, and the music of a thought swept over me. There arose before me visions of the splendor of the Conqueror who once pined away his life on that bleak rook, and who, like the fettered eagle, beat against the bars of his prison house until nature exhausted itself, and wearied with taunts and tyrants, he sought his chamber to lie down and die. And the tramp of armies, the surge and crash of battle ?the fatal charge of the old guard, the hand to hand encounter, the stirring strains of martial music, the waring aloft of battered eagles and tattered pennons, the shriek of the wounded, and then the grand shout of victory?ovtrtoh^minglg grand, all these I saw, and heard and powdered at t-z-And then methought I wandered away over the ssa till I came and stood at the bedside of the dying Emperor on this barren isle, The same flash was in his eye that had kindled there on so many fields of battle?and I saw his lips move, and I listened, and eaught the words, "fete<farnue!" the last hearer uttered, and with them the soul of earth's greatest went out into the night 1?A strain of mournful music swept past I saw the long fountain drip of funeral plumes, and the sad procession more on its winding way among the hills to the lonely grave where they laid him. Isaw it all. I witnessed the end of the tragedy! Fancy had woven a spell about me I dreaded to sever. I was chained to the spot by a species of fascination I could not cast off, and lingered long, drinking in the beauty of the soene?and when at last a fair wind sprang up, and we spread our wings for another flight, and steered away from the island, the silver tin tings of the bright May-moon glistening on our white sails as they were flung out to the breeze, making us look I like a phantom thing, I heaved a deep, deep sigh, [and wondered should I ever look on a spectacle so grand, so peculiarly impressive, so sublime again ! It was a spectacle sublime in Peace?in grandeur ?in suggestions t It gave birth to lofty imaginings I Sinoe then I have witnereed another? how different it was, and yet it was grand, i a ?..n_ vii t I).., x. impressive, lcnxiunj ouuuuio i sut nera the Genius of Strife spread his wings, and the skeleton hand was busy beckoning souls into the dread, dark Night. There the Angel of Peaoe horered silently t How eloquent the contrast! It was the spectacle of moral grandeur and physioal majesty on which the sun rose on the memorable 24th of- April, 1802?the passage of the naval fleet under the command of the intrepid Farrsgut beyond Forts "Jaokson" and 41 St. Philip,'* those " lions in the way," which guarded the enframes to the Creeoent City. There was nothing Inching to give picturesque effect and dramatic interest to the sight of the floating guardians of our country's honor in the weird hour of dawn, sailing majestically into the very / / JTH. NUMBER 41. jaw* of death. How awful the quiet which reigned before the signal lights were hung out by ship after ship, which was to be the moment for the start And like tmhooded falcons, we sprang at the quarry 1 And then the murderous contents of two hundred iron throats belched forth at us, and the iron rams of the enemy waited behind sunken obstructions for our onset?watching like hungry wolves ior tne approach of prey I And in oolamn on, onward we dashed into the midst of them, tearing and crashing, overwhelming and crashing! And many a brave heart was then stilled forever,? fighting for the old flag they had never deserted?fear was unknown to them? nobly they fell! And the whistling shell with its hideous screech, and the solid oonical shot, swept over and around ns as thick as the hail the heavens hurl earthwards?telling tales of homes made desolate, and the weepings and wailings of broken hearts. There was no soothing melody to attune the senses. Here devildom was dominant ; only harsh, disoordaat noises fell upon the ear, and, men who stood shoulder to shoulder were oompelled to seream to make themselves heard! The hand of God had shut the eyes of stars, and veiled the vision from the faoe of ths moon 1 It was a fierce and sanguinary spectacle. Its grandeur was towering high?it was overwhelming t Those who witnessed it, will never, I am sure, forget it, e'en should the Reaper suffer them to pass the allotted three score years and ten. The fight was over and the victory won! After As battle /?the Demon of TWtrnfltinn wfaJ fcmm Ulw?. the maimed and the dying were thought of. Shot and shell right well had done their hideous work. And not oalyou the decks of the war ships, but in the houses and homes when mothers and sisters dwelt. By the hearthstone where the wearied wife watehea day after day for the return of the loved one! When he fell by the side of his gun, the shaft winged ita way to a fond mother's heart, as she waited and prayed for the boy who will never come back again ! I looked that day on scenes whieh made me shudder, and I shudder now when I revert to them, and others whieh 11 have witnessed the Destroyer paint on i battle-fields, surrounded by not half the ' Km* W.1V.J ?1 giauueut una uwuw U1 UtflGQ UW HOW of blood! Ah 1 there ere wounds of the spirit end the heert thet we reck not of! Mother-love?wife-love?sister lore! Think ye whet wounds ere theirs 7 Those gentle mothers who were piotoriel bibles to the childhood of their sons, think 70 their heerts shed no teers for the slein 7 And jet sorrow's urn is filling?filling--J still filling with the teers of these broken heerts! The picture is repulsive end aed. Drew the veil over such herrowing sorrow. Their grief is holy now! Side by side, place the two pictures I heve drawn. On the one, smiles the Angel of Peace, end the lend end the see ere wondroualy beautiful I Over the other, broods the Death-dealing demon of Civil War, and the frowns of God darken lU. i. I i-J A i.1 uo watuB i ouu nouw utuwr uuia uui l heyc looked on?when the jell* of the blood-stained combatants?father scraped against son, brother in league agaiaet brother?were akin to the shrieks of madmen?when I wondered if the terried rank* of devilt at they troop through Hell, made horrors more hadeoos in theh [ blackest nights i Contrast the picture* I Do they bear a comparison ? And yet this/rivil strife with eQ its re