I spoke of this to Cousin Dempster, and, says he:
"This makes no difference in the world. Take all you can from the Government. That is high patriotism."
I shook my head.
"Cousin," says I, "it kind of seems to me that this special train is a sort of a trap. How can I, a free-born Vermonter--national in some respects, and br.i.m.m.i.n.g over with first-cla.s.s patriotism, but Vermont to the back-bone--first and foremost, lead off a party like this, one car choke full of Mr. Grant"s cabinet people. Now, if Mr. Greeley and Mr.
Grant should rile up against each other--which I hope they won"t--don"t you see that I am in an awful mixed position?--the National Government on one side with that stupendous soldier at the head, and that great white-hatted Vermonter on the other?"
"That is, you want to be neutral," says Dempster.
"Well, yes--kind of neutral," says I, "and a little for both."
"Not exactly on the fence, but cautious," says he; "keep your boat in harbor till the tide rises and the wind blows, then hoist sail and catch up with the old craft that has been tugging on in shallow water?"
"No," says I, feeling the old Puritan blood beginning to boil up. "That may answer for some people, but not for me. An idea has just struck me; a woman"s political ideas should be suggested, not proclaimed."
Without speaking another word, I put on my things, went right down to Pennsylvania Avenue, and bought a soft white hat, a little broad in the brim, which I turned up on one side. Then I went into a milliner"s store, carrying it in my hand, and made a woman curl a long white feather over the crown, which gave the whole affair a touch of the beehive, stamping it with beautiful femininity.
With this hat on my head, and a double-breasted white jacket over my black alpaca, I took my honored place in the cars that day.
Of course I sat in the cabinet car, feeling myself the sole representative of Vermont in that august company. The ladies looked at me sidewise when I came in; some of the cabinet men half winked at each other and tried to smile. But that white hat was no laughing matter, and they wilted down before it.
LXIII.
AMONG THE CADETS.
Dear sisters:--The train started, and there I sat in my glory till we got to Annapolis, just the sleepiest town, crowded full of the oldest houses and the slowest people that I ever saw in my born days. Some colored persons were dawdling around the depot, and a few lazy white folks pa.s.sing down the street, stopped to look at us as we got out of the cars. Especially my white hat and double-breasted jacket seemed to take them.
Once I heard something that sounded like the beginning of a cheer, but the voices were so lazy that they couldn"t carry it out, so it muttered itself to death, and that was the end of it.
Twenty of the j.a.panees were with me when I alighted from the car and spread my white parasol, which hovered like a dove over us, for I made it flutter beautifully as we pa.s.sed along.
The cabinet people followed after, and just as we were forming to go down street, like a military training, my white hat and feather leading them on, a gentleman came up to us and began to shake hands all round.
He was a tall, genteel sort of a person, with light hair and a beard soft and silky as corn ta.s.sels; but all under his eyes, blue powder marks were scattered, as if he"d spent half his life firing off Fourth of July powder salutes, and had burst up on some of them.
While I was wondering who it could be, Mr. Robeson, who has some dealings with navy yards and shipping, come up to where I stood, and says he:
"Miss Frost, allow me to present Commodore Worden, the gentleman who distinguished himself on the first Monitor."
Sisters, that minute the powder marks on Worden"s handsome face were glorified in my eyes. I reached out my hands. I pressed his, my beaming eyes covered him with particular admiration. Feeling as if I were the colonel of that company, I longed to lift my white hat and give him a military salute. What I did say was significant.
"Worden," says I, "when certain events come about--I say nothing, but this hat and jacket are typical of what I mean--when these great and luminous events fill the hemisphere your glorious bravery on that iron flat-boat shall have its full record. I will myself send your picture to the great Grand Duke of all the Russias, and if there is a higher notch in the public shipping than you have, I know nothing of the friend whose colors I wear if anybody stands before you. I have seen the picture of your Monitor. To my eye it looks like a flat-iron, with the handle in the water; but it did good work, and so did you. Grant knows it. My own immortal statesman will appreciate it."
Commodore Worden bowed, and smiled, and squoze my hand so long that I began to feel anxious about my white gloves. But he dropped it at last, and we all moved on, my white feather waving in front, just like that which King Henry of Navarre wore in battles. Only mine was a peaceful emblem, dyed in the milk of human kindness, and curled up in the sunshine of prosperity.
We marched through dull streets and round deserted corners, cutting in and out every which way till we came to a large gate, which shut the Navy Yard out from the rest of mankind.
Then we filed through into a beautiful meadow, with the gra.s.s cut short, sprinkled over with trees, and cut into footpaths. Part of it was bounded by water, the rest by rows of handsome houses and great buildings that looked like factories shut up for want of work.
The minute I and Mr. Iwakura walked through the gate, bang! went a cannon; bang, bang, bang! seventeen times.
"What on earth is that?" says I, turning to Dempster, who was just behind me.
"It is a salute for us," says he.
"Us!" says I, with accents of disdain that put him in his place at once.
"For you, then," says he, smiling in a way I didn"t like, for, having no envy in my own disposition, I cannot endure it in others.
Mr. Iwakura and I walked on slowly. He looked at me and smiled as the guns kept going off, till I counted seventeen; then they stopped and I was glad of it, for I remembered that our meeting-house bell tolls once for every year, when a person dies, and I felt a little anxious about the number of guns they might pile on to live folks. But they stopped short at seventeen, which is an age no girl need be ashamed to own, and which showed how young some persons can look in spite of hard literary toil.
Well, first we went into Commodore Worden"s house, where Mr. Iwakura and I were introduced to Mrs. Worden and some other ladies. Then the rest came in for a little notice, and we filed off into the grounds again, where there was a general training of boys in blue jackets, with b.u.t.tons and things, all armed with guns, which they handled like old militia men. Sometimes, when they poked their guns right at us, I kind of got behind Mr. Iwakura, who, being small, wasn"t much of a shelter, but better than nothing. In fact, I was rather glad when this part of the fun died out.
After this, we went into one of the big houses where the blue boys live, and a whole lot of little, make-believe ships were shown to us, and two j.a.panee boys told Mr. I. how they were worked--which would have been interesting, only we didn"t know a word of that language, nor much about the baby-house of ships, and didn"t listen to what was said in English.
Then the boys in blue and b.u.t.tons went into the meadow again, and got out a lot of small cannon, and banged, and ran in lines and squads down to the river, as if they were awful mad with the water and meant to dam it--dam it up, I wish you to understand, for even indirect profanity isn"t in my nature.
After this, we all went down to a great, lumbering old ship, which is all the home these blue boys have the first year they come to the Annapolis school, which, being a sailor inst.i.tution, gives them a taste for creeping into holes and sleeping on a yard or two of rope swung to the ship"s beams--which may be pleasant fun, but doesn"t look like it.
Sisters, it was getting along in the day, and, though in a certain sense spiritualized by genius, I was hungry. Mr. Iwakura, too, had a pitiful look in his black eyes; but a storm of music called us from hankering thoughts, and we all streamed, at a faster double-quick than the boys could show, into the great dining-room of one of the big houses. A splendid table was set out there, which we gathered round like a half-starved regiment on training-day. Then began such a practice in cider bottles, flying corks, and cider foaming and fizzing into gla.s.ses, as beat all the cannon and howitzer blazings of the day--for that ended in something, and the rest didn"t.
It is astonishing what effect eating and drinking has on the feet; I could hardly keep from dancing all the way from that dining-hall to the other building, which is kept especially for dancing. Well, we did dance, for the music just took one right into the midst of it, want to or not. Besides, we hadn"t been to a tomb, and n.o.body had been killed, so we just went in for it. My alpaca dress isn"t over long, and I wasn"t afraid of showing my feet when there was no train to tangle them up. We danced with our bonnets and hats on--we ladies, I mean--and the way my white feather rose and fell and fluttered over the rest was enough to wake up the American heart in every bosom present.
LXIV.
AMERICAN AUTHORS.
Dear sisters:--You have heard of Mr. Shakespeare, a writer of old England, who died, years and years ago, in a little country place in England. He was celebrated for several things besides writing. Going to sleep under trees is one of them; shooting deer that belonged to somebody else--who took him up and made an awful time about it before a justice of the peace, who fined him, or something--is another. Then, again, he married an elderly girl, and forgot to live with her ever so long. While she stayed at home, he went up to London, and wrote plays and played them before her Majesty Queen Elizabeth, who ought to have reminded him of his married elderly girl, being her own royal self of that cla.s.s, only not married. There is no reason to think she did have much influence in that direction though, for that particular queen was more celebrated for keeping husbands away from their wives than bringing them cosily together.
The truth is, from the very first--when she got up a series of romping platonics with Lord Seymour, her step-mother"s husband, to her last, gray-headed old flirtation with the young Ess.e.x--her taste ran against the practical idea of husbands living with their own wives. That non-matrimonial creature may have tried her power on Shakespeare--who knows?
Sisters, there is one part of this man"s life and character that may shock your religious feelings. _He wrote plays_; _he acted plays too_; and that female queen encouraged him in it. Now, ever since I went to see the "Black Crook," I scorn myself for ever having one mite of charity for such things, and I haven"t the conscience to say one word in their favor to you, as a Society. Still, this Mr. Shakespeare did write some things that might have sounded tolerably well in a lecture or a sermon that wasn"t too strictly doctrinal.
Last night I was talking with a lawyer from away "Out West," who spoke real kindly about Mr. Shakespeare"s writings, and seemed to think if he had put off being born until now, and settled "Out West," where he could have given him a hint now and then, he might have made a first-rate literary man. "Even as it is," says he, "I do my best to make him popular, for he wrote some very readable things--very readable, indeed.
For instance, not long since, in an exciting slander case, I quoted these lines, with a burning eloquence that lifted the judge right off from his bench:
""He," says I, "that steals my purse, steals stuff; "Twas something, t"aint nothing, t"was mine, "Tis hisen, and has been slave to thousands; But he that hooketh from me my good name, Grabs that which don"t do him no good, But makes me feel very bad indeed.""
"Is that the genuine old English that Mr. Shakespeare wrote in?" says I.