Columbia phoenix. (Columbia, S.C.) 1865-1865, March 28, 1865, Image 2

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-iii-i- ll I p CAPTURE, SACK and DESTRUCTION a.? * OF THE Oiiry of OC?1?XXX3LTG?1? XVI. . . ?Within f,he dwellings, th" scene? were of "more har^hisnrl tragical character, rarefy soft fct.ed by env ludicrous n<e/>!-:-i*. Tliere. ns it tf. . ,' itid by the pricey of tb? apart f ku//', will; 1 nt. few eyes to witness, tbe robbers vf'cte ru. brutal, inore unscrupulous, less heedful < : decencv. reserve or humanity. The * pistol t . vbrf bosom or tbe*bead of woman,"the patient motlier*;the trembling daughter, WHS tbe ordinary introduction to the demands of tbe robbers. "Your tr?>!d., silver, whteh, Jewels.' " Tliey !;irc no titee, allowed no pause or hesitation. ft- was in- vaiu that the woman offered her keys, eftpvocceded to op'-n drawer, or \vi?Bdrol?j.' <r'Cabinet, or trunk. It was dashed lo pi^'s by axe or gun butt, with tho cry, "Ww haw a shorter way than thai!" It was in vaia ?"hut,she pleaded to ?pare her fur? niture, taral she would gi^g' np all ils contents. ?She prayed to wretches utterly-, heartless in humanity, and hardened to everv crinre and against avery human fjeljng. * Ali the precious things of a faintly, such as the heart loves to pore on.in quiet hobie when a?otie with me? mory-th? detva, miniature, the photograph, the portrait-these were dashed to pieces, crushed under foot, and the more the trembler ploadedr for tbo object so precious, the more violent tba rage which destroyed it. Nothing .was sacred in their eyes"save the ?old and silver which they bore away. Hior were th?se acts those of common soldiers. Commissioned officers, <: " rank 60 high as that of a colon. 1, were frequently among the most active in spo? liation, and not always the most tender ot considerate in the manner ajid acting of. theil crimps. "Arni with fiendish malignity, refining upon hate and laalice, the pldWJorers, affcc? glutting themselves wjth spoil, would utter tin foulest speeches in their ears, coupled witt oaths as condiment, dealing in what they as sumed, besides, *o be bitter sarcasms upon theil cause and country. ; ."And what do you think of the Yankee; ?no*?" was a frequent question? "Do yon not fear us nowt" "What do you think of se*es ?eion?'\?te., ?c. "We mean to wipe you out "We'll burn the very stones of South Carolina.' Even General Howard, who is said to havi beer/ ?nee a piouii person, is reported' to Lavt made this- rep uv 60 a citizen who had expostu lated with him on the monstrous crime o which his army had been ?guilty: "It is onh ?what the- country deserves. It "is her fit punish ment-, aud.if this does not quiet rebellion, ant we have to ra turn, we ir ill do this work tho roughly. Wi will jot leave woman or child.' This was tho very spirit of the savag Puritan, reviving all the brutalities of the tim. of .Cromwell and bia sinister, psalm-sin gi nj hypocrites. The Mormonism into which Ncr * o F.ngland ?has passed, from Puritanism, has chanced none of the essential characteristics of the race. Almost universally, the worsen of Columbia behaved themselves nobly under the insults ot the ruffians. They preserved that patient, calm demeanor, that simple, almost masculine, firmness, which So becomes humanity, in the hour of trial, when nothing oan be opposed to ;he tempest hut thc virtue of inflexible en? durance. They rarely replied to these insults; j but looking coldly into the faces of the assail? ants, heard them in silence sud with unblcnch ing cheeks. When forced to answer, they did so in monosyllables only, or in brief, stern lumruaj/e, avowed their confidence in the cause of their c:>?intrv, the principles ?md rigbts foi Wlihsh.thc-ir brothers and sons fought, and theil fnHh in the ultimate favor and protection o: , Ci"d. One or two of main- of these dialogues if they mav tie called such, where ono of th? parties eau i-rge his speech with all th? agencies of power $or its enforcement, an< with all his Instruments of terror in eight while the oilier stands exposed to the-wors terrors which maddened passions, insolent ii the consciousness of strength-ma}- suffice as: sample of many: " "Well, what do you think of the Yankee nowif" ."Do you expect a favorable opinion?" "l?o! d-ii itl But you fear us, and that euough." "Ao-we do net fear you." "What! not yet?" . "Not yeti" "But you shall fear us." 1 "Never!" "We'll make yen." "Yo* may raflicL we can endure; but fear P'iv?r!? A ny tb i na; but that" "We'll make you fear us!'', clapping ? r volver to the lady's head. lier eye never faltered. i!er cheek nev changad ita color. rici- lips were firmly coi pr*esscd. Her arras folded ?>n her boSdm. Tl ey?.- of the assassin glared iuto her own.<|; SJ met the encounter without flivching, and 1 lowered the implement of murder, with ? oath: *'D-u ii! Yon have pluck enough foi whole reginieiii!r' The Vpluck" of our women was especially Isubject af acknowledgment with these-wretch' They could admire a miali ty with which . th had not toni to sympathize-or 'rather t paramount passion in their souls fer greed a plunder kept in subjection all other qualiti without absolutely extinguishing them fr? their minds and thoughts. To inspire terror the weak^strangc to say, seemed to these cr tures a rort of heroism. To extort fear a awe appeared to their monstrous vanity a t bute more grateful than any other, and curious conflict was sometimes carjied on their minds betreu their vanity and cupidi Occasionally they gave with ?ne hand, wi they robbed with ?Bother. Sa varal <wrri< ? li_*... _ < I instances of this nature took Vlai'?. one ?f i whieb must snAce. JV certain Yankee officer happened to hear thntftm oki acquaintance of I his, ?whom he had knccrn intim?t el}' at West I Point and Louisiana, \fps residing in Columbia, ide vent to see hun avter tb? fire, and aseer taiaed tho* his losses bad been very beary, exceeding two hundred thousand dollars. The parties had not separated fer sn hour, when a messenger came from the Yankee, bringing a box, which contained $100.000 in Confederate notes. This tba Yanks? begged his Southern friend to accept, ss helping,.to make up hie ? losses. Thc latter declined the ffit, not being altogether satisfied in conscience that hs couta heal his own hurts of fortune by the use of stolen' money. In many esses, Confederate money hy the handfull was bestowed by tb? officers and . soldiei s upon parti ea from whore they had robbed tba last partieras of clothing and even Gen. Sherman could give to j?rtie? whom he krrew, th? flour and bacon which he hr.d stolen from t housands of starving widowi and srphans. So, he left with the people ol Columbia s hundred old worthless muskets for th*ir protection, while emptying their arsenals! fi a chaise collection of beautiful Enfield rifles. And so the starring citizens of Celare Iiis owe to him a few hundred starving cattle, of which he had robbed the starving potpie of Beaufort, Barnwell, Orangeburg and Lexin?? ton-cattle left without food, and fe? whiel food csuld not be found, and dying pf exhaus? tion at the rate of fifteen, to.twenty head per diem. And what a monftrous mockery of benevolence is the ostentatious, oontributios from navy and army, in Charleston, for the relief of thoa? people whom their armies har? so wantonly sud method?cally brought to mid. They first eut our throats, then send us an ad? hesive plaster. The cunning of this ostenta? tious charity, in whick they uss stolen pro? perty and money, is, L possible, to persuade the Iworld that the incendiarism which destroys ?ll in its path i t unpremeditated and purely acci? dental. But to return. XVII. In this connection and this section, in which we need to devote so much of our space to the cruel and brutal treatment of eur women, w? think it proper to include a communication from the venerable Dr. Sill, one of the most esteemed and well known citizens of Columbia lt is from his own pen, and'the facts occurrec tinder his own eyes. "We give this ss one of. a thousand lik<? cases, witnessed by a thousand eyes, and taking place at Lhe same time it every quarter of the city, almost from the hom of the enemy's arrival to that of his departure II? writes as follows: * "On Thursday, the day before the evaeustioi of the city by the Confederate forces, I invite' a very poor Frtncli lady, (Madame Pelletier, with her child, refugees fiom Charleston, t take ahelter in my house, where thev might, a ' least, hS7e inch protection as I could give b*i j shelter and food for hereelf and child. She wi