With courtesy Lee met his distinguished visitor at the door and grasped his hand.
"Walk in, Mr. Blair. You know my sister, Mrs. Marshall of Baltimore?"
Blair smiled.
"I am happy to say that Mrs. Marshall and I are the best of friends.
We have often met at the house of my son, Montgomery Blair, of Mr.
Lincoln"s Cabinet."
"Let me take your hat, sir," Lee said with an answering smile.
"Thank you."
The Colonel crossed the room to place it on a table.
Mrs. Marshall took advantage of the moment to whisper to Blair.
"I"ve done my best. I"m afraid I haven"t convinced him. May G.o.d give you the word to speak to my brother to-day!"
Blair rubbed his hands and a look of triumph overspread his rugged face.
"He has, Madame. I have a message for him!"
"A message?"
"From the highest authority!"
"May I be present at your conference?" she pleaded eagerly.
"By all means, Madame. Stay and hear my announcement. He cannot refuse me."
Lee sought at once to put Blair at ease on his mission.
"From my sister"s remark a moment ago, I may guess the purpose of your coming, Mr. Blair?"
His guest surveyed Lee with an expression of deep pleasure in the unfolding of his message.
"In part, yes, you may have guessed my purpose. But I have something to say that even your keen mind has not surmised--"
"I am honored, sir, in your call and I shall be glad to hear you."
Blair drew himself erect as if on military duty.
"Colonel Lee, I have come after a conference with President Lincoln, to ask you to throw the power of your great name into this fight now to put an end to chaos--"
"You have come from the President?"
"Unofficially--"
"Oh--"
"But with his full knowledge and consent."
"And what is his suggestion?"
Blair hesitated.
"He cannot make it until he first knows that you will accept his offer."
"His offer?"
Blair waited until the thought had been fully grasped and then uttered each word with solemn emphasis.
"His offer, sir, of the supreme command of the armies of the Union--"
A cry of joy and pride came resistlessly from the sister"s lips.
"Oh, Robert--Robert!"
Lee was surprised and deeply moved. He rose from his seat, walked to the window, looked out, flushed and slowly said:
"You--you--cannot mean this--?"
Blair hastened to a.s.sure him.
"I am straight from the White House. General Scott has eagerly endorsed your name."
"But I cannot realize this to me--from Abraham Lincoln?"
"From Abraham Lincoln, whose simple common sense is the greatest a.s.set to-day which the Union possesses. His position is one of frank conciliation toward the South."
"Yet he said once that this Republic cannot endure half slave and half free and the South interpreted that to mean--war--"
"Exactly. Crowds do not reason. They refuse to think. They refuse, therefore, to hear his explanation of those words. He hates Slavery as you hate Slavery. He knows, as you know, that it is doomed by the process of time. To make this so clear that he who runs may read, he wrote in his inaugural address in so many words his solemn pledge to respect every right now possessed by the masters of the South under law.
_""I have no purpose to interfere with the inst.i.tution of Slavery in the States where it exists.""_
"His sole purpose now is to save the Union, Slavery or no Slavery--"
"Surely, Robert," his sister cried, "you can endorse that stand!"
"Mr. Lincoln," Blair went on eagerly, "is a leader whose common sense amounts to genius. No threats or bl.u.s.ter, inside his own party or outside of it, can swerve him from his high aim. He is going to save this Union first and let all other questions bide their time."
Lee searched Blair with his keen eyes.
"But Mr. Lincoln, without the authority of Congress, has practically declared war. He has called on Virginia to furnish troops to fight a sister State. My State has decided that he had no power under the Const.i.tution to issue such a call. It is, therefore, illegal. The organic law of the republic makes no provision for raising troops to fight a sister State."
Blair lifted both hands in a persuasive gesture.