Daisy In The Field - Page 184/231

There was no answer to be made to this either. It only sank

down into my heart; and I knew I had no help in this world.

The question immediately pressed itself upon our attention,

where would we go? Dr. Sandford proposed Melbourne; and urged

that in the first place we should avail ourselves of the

hospitalities of his sister's house in that neighbourhood,

most generously tendered us, till he could be at leisure to

make arrangements at our old home. Just now he was under the

necessity of returning immediately to Washington, where he had

one or more hospitals in charge; indeed he left us that same

night of our landing; but before he went he earnestly pressed

his sister's invitation upon my mother, and promised that so

soon as the settlement of the country's difficulties should

set him free, he would devote himself to the care of us and

Melbourne till we were satisfactorily established.

"And I am in hopes it will not be very long now," he said

aside to me. "I think the country has got the right man at

last; and that is what we have been waiting for. Grant says he

will fight it out on this line, if it takes all summer; and I

think the end is coming."

Mamma would give no positive answer to the doctor's instances;

she thanked him and talked round the subject, and he was

obliged to go away without any contentment of her giving.

Alone with me, she spoke out: "I will take no Yankee civilities, Daisy. I will be under no

obligation to one of them. And I could not endure to be in the

house of one of them, if it were conferring instead of

receiving obligation."

"What will you do, then, mamma."

"I will wait. You do not suppose that the South can be

conquered, Daisy? The idea is absurd!"

"But, mamma? -"

"Well?"

"Why is it absurd?"

"Because they are not a people to give up. Don't you know

that? They would die first, every man and woman of them."

"But mamma, whatever the spirit of the people may be, numbers

and means have to tell upon the question at last."

"Numbers and means!" mamma repeated scornfully. "I tell you,

Daisy, the South cannot yield. And as they cannot yield, they

must sooner or later succeed. Success always comes at last to

those who cannot be conquered."

"What is to become of us in the mean time, mamma?"

"I don't see that it signifies much," she said, relapsing out

of the fire with which the former sentences had been

pronounced. "I would like to live to see the triumph come."

That was all I could get from mamma that evening. She lay down

on a sofa and buried her face in pillows. I sat in the

darkening room and mused. The windows were open; a soft warm

air blew the curtains gently in and out; from the street below

came the murmur of business and voices and clatter of feet and

sound of wheels; not with the earnestness of alarm or the

droop of depression, but ringing, sharp, clear, cheery. The

city did not feel badly. New York had not suffered in its

fortunes or prosperity. There was many a battlefield at the

South where the ravages of war had swept all traces and hopes

of good fortunes away; never one at the North where the corn

had been blasted, or the fruits of the earth untimely ravaged,

or the heart of the husbandman disappointed in his ground.

Mamma's conclusions seemed to me without premise. What of my

own fortunes? I thought the wind of the desert, had blown upon

them and they were dead. I remember, in the trembling of my

heart as I sat and listened and mused, and thoughts trooped in

and out of my head with little order or volition on my part,

one word was a sort of rallying point on which they gathered

and fell back from time to time, though they started out again

on fresh roamings - "Lord, thou hast been our dwelling-place

in all generations"! - I remember, - it seems to me now as if

it had been some time before I was born, - how the muslin

curtains floated in on the evening wind, and the hum and stir

of the street came up to my ear; the bustle and activity,

though it was evening; and how the distant battlefields of

Virginia looked in forlorn contrast in the far distance. Yet

this was really the desert and that the populous place; for

there, somewhere, my world was. I grew very desolate as I

thought, or mused, by the window. If it had not been for those

words of the refuge, my heart would have failed me utterly.

After a long while mamma roused up and we had tea brought.