登陆注册
15462500000024

第24章 CHAPTER V THE NEW PRESIDENT(1)

Their great day came. Clear sunlight shone over the town, the hills and the brown waters of the Alabama. It was a peculiarly Southern country, different, Harry thought, from his own Kentucky, more enthusiastic, perhaps, and less prone to count the cost. The people had come not only on the railroad, but they were arriving now from far places in wagons and on horseback. Men of distinction, almost universally, wore black clothes, the coats very long, black slouch hats, wide of brim, and white shirts with glistening or heavily ruffled fronts. There were also many black people in a state of pleasurable excitement, although the war--if one should come--would be over them.

Harry and his two young friends were anxious to visit Montgomery and take a good look at the town, but they did not ask for leave, as Colonel Talbot had already sternly refused all such applications. The military law continued to lie heavily upon them, and, soon after they finished a solid breakfast with appetites sharpened by the open air, they were ordered to fall into line. Arrayed in their fine new uniforms, to which the last touch of neatness had been added, they marched away to the town. They might see it as a company, but not as individuals.

They walked with even step along the grassy slopes, their fine appearance drawing attention and shouts of approval from the dense masses of people of all ages and all conditions of life who were gathering. Harry, a cadet with a small sword by his side, felt his heart swell as he trod the young turf, and heard the shouting and applause. The South Carolinians were the finest body of men present, and they were conscious of it. Eyes always to the front, they marched straight on, apparently hearing nothing, but really hearing everything.

They reached the houses presently and Harry saw the dome of the capitol on its high hill rising before them, but a moment or two later the Guards, with the Palmetto flag waving proudly in front, wheeled and marched toward the railroad station. There they halted in close ranks and stood at attention. Although the young soldiers remained immovable, there was not a heart in the company that did not throb with excitement.

Colonel Talbot and Major St. Hilaire were a little in advance, erect and commanding figures.

Other troops, volunteer companies, were present and they spread to right and left of the South Carolinians. Behind and everywhere except in the cleared space before them gathered the people, a vast mass through which ran the hum and murmur of expectancy. Overhead, the sun leaped out and shone for a while with great brilliancy. "A good omen," many said.

And to Harry it all seemed good, too. The excitement, the enthusiasm were contagious. If any prophet of evil was present he had nothing to say.

A jet of smoke standing black against the golden air appeared above a hill, and then came the rumble of a train. It was that which bore the President elect, coming fast, and a sudden great shout went up from the multitude, followed by silence, broken only by the heavy breathing of so many. Harry's heart leaped again, but his will kept his body immovable.

The rumble became a roar, and the jet of smoke turned to a cloud.

Then the train drew into the station and stopped. The people began a continuous shout, bands played fiercely, and a tall, thin man of middle years, dressed in black broadcloth, descended from a coach. All the soldiers saluted, the bands played more fiercely than ever, and the shouting of the crowd swelled in volume.

It was the first time that Harry had ever seen Jefferson Davis, and the face, so unlike that which he expected, impressed him. He saw a cold, gray, silent man with lips pressed tightly together. He did not behold here the Southern fire and passion of which he was hearing so much talk, but rather the reserve and icy resolve of the far North. Harry at first felt a slight chill, but it soon passed. It was better at such a time to have a leader of restraint and dignity than the homely joker, Lincoln, of whom such strange tales came.

Mr. Davis lifted his black hat to the shouting crowd, and bowed again and again. But he did not smile. His face remained throughout set in the same stern mold. As the troops closed up, he entered the carriage waiting for him, and drove slowly toward the heart of the city, the multitude following and breaking at intervals into shouts and cheers.

The Palmetto Guards marched on the right of the carriage, and Harry was able to watch the President-elect all the time. The face held his attention. Its sternness did not relax. It was the face of a man who had seen the world, and who believed in the rule of strength.

The procession led on to a hotel, a large building with a great portico in front. Here it stopped, the bands ceased to play, Mr. Davis descended from the carriage and entered the portico, where a group of men famous in the South stood, ready to welcome him. The troops drew up close to the portico, and back of them, every open space was black with people.

Harry, in the very front rank, saw and heard it all. Mr. Davis stopped as soon as he reached the portico, and Yancey, the famous orator of Alabama, to whom Harry had delivered his letters in Charleston, stepped forward, and, in behalf of the people of the South, made a speech of welcome in a clear, resonant, and emphatic tone. The applause compelled him to stop at times, but throughout, Mr. Davis stood rigid and unsmiling. His countenance expressed none of his thoughts, whatever they may have been. Harry's eyes never wandered from his face, except to glance now and then at the weazened, shrunken, little man who stood near him, Alexander H. Stephens of Georgia, who would take the oath of office as Vice-President of the new Confederacy. He had been present throughout the convention as a delegate from Georgia, and men talked of the mighty mind imprisoned in the weak and dwarfed body.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 幸福火影之绝对防御

    幸福火影之绝对防御

    忘忧拖着小腮帮,坐在天台上,郁闷的想着:“长门哥哥和君麻吕哥哥真的没有基情吗?白尼桑为什么长得那么中性呢?不知道人家很是着急吗?迪达拉哥哥,你的真爱又在什么地方?唉,家里出众的哥哥实在是太多了,终生大事很愁人呀!你们能在表现的和原著不一样点儿吗?”自来也看着自家可爱的乖女,也无奈的叹口气,“唉,为什么人家的乖女就是看不到自家的老爹还是单身贵族呢?操心那些妹控的小子干嘛?”鸣人突然冒出金黄色的脑袋,傻笑的看着忘忧,讨好的说:“小宝,还有哥哥我呐,哥哥的良配是谁呀?哥哥很着急哦!”鹿丸一脚踹飞了鸣人,摸摸忘忧的小揪揪辫,“小宝,咱们环球旅游去吧,远离这些无聊的妹控,妹控最讨厌了。”
  • 淡定·从容·心安之从容

    淡定·从容·心安之从容

    民国四大高僧中,弘一法师和虚云法师两位高僧的思想代表着近现代佛学界的权威思想,《淡定·从容·心安》系列将两位大师的思想精华集结,把深奥的道理化成通俗易懂的话,使人以读书的方式亲近高僧大德善知识,启迪大众思维,唤醒世人迷梦,是值得细细品味的经典之作。
  • 甲者天下

    甲者天下

    不同的科幻世界,另类的修炼体系,别样的意味...甲者等级划分:甲士、气甲士、元甲士、量甲士、机甲士、战甲士、玄甲士、地甲士、天甲士、圣甲士。每阶又分平级、初级、中级、高级、峰级。
  • 红颜若汐胜似雪

    红颜若汐胜似雪

    冷眼脾妮半正半邪红尘初妆弹奏—世繁华!我白灵儿他妈的好不容易报了仇却又…穿越了!不过穿就穿吧为啥子变成了一个小姑凉呢?坑爹啊!穿成孩纸就算了,为啥子天天被人追杀着直让她骂人呢?坑娘啊!好不容易不被人追杀,修成正果之后,为啥子就不能让人好好过个日子呢?坑天啊!为啥不让人好过呢?坑地啊!为啥修成正果之后,却被一个赤裸裸的果男要了女人最重视的东东啊!并且还怀孕了,生下一对龙凤胎,虽然还可以养活。不过连亲爹都不知道是谁。让她怎么办?坑……healthy[还有谁]不过为啥八年之后这个夜夜不让人好好睡觉的男人是啥玩意,天天让人下不了床塌的那个男人是个啥玩意儿?么么哒![男女双双纯洁]
  • 都市蜉蝣录

    都市蜉蝣录

    都市里,我们都是飘荡的蜉蝣,来去匆匆,寻觅自己心的痕迹.且记录一出追忆逝水年华,痴人说梦的忏悔录.
  • 网王之民生各有所乐兮

    网王之民生各有所乐兮

    一本网王的同人,非穿越,小说名字虽然是从《离骚》里摘出来的一句话,然而并没有什么太大的关系。
  • 黄泉之路

    黄泉之路

    “我想创造一个奇迹,即使是我们这样的凡人,也可以自由的活着。”
  • 痴情总裁:女人别逃

    痴情总裁:女人别逃

    远远望着教堂里的那对新人,她心如死灰,所有的海誓山盟都成了无情的嘲讽他可以翻手为云覆手为雨,却被命运之神作弄再见时,她在别的男人身旁笑靥如花一年的婚姻契约,让她肚子里的孩子成为了笑柄“原来十五分钟就可以斩断我们的一切”她说的如此决绝。
  • 美少女拐来的狐狸骑士

    美少女拐来的狐狸骑士

    女主闻人桃花是一名普通高中生。一天晚上,在宿舍就寝时,一场恶梦发生……异能觉醒,招来祸害,与另一名女子心意相通……醒来竟成了柴废无比的捉妖师!直到后来遇见了她心仪的骑士……
  • 不死便是永生

    不死便是永生

    身负主角光辉的浩歌果断悲剧的穿越了,来到一个僵尸满地跑,怪兽多入狗的悲剧世界.....(>﹏<)不过身为主角的他是否能够存活下来?拥有召唤体质的浩歌究竟能召唤出什么?什么?巨龙?怪兽?都弱爆了!