登陆注册
5395000000077

第77章

At last we did find ourselves on the prairie, amid the waving grass, with the land rolling on before us in a succession of gentle sweeps, never rising so as to impede the view, or apparently changing in its general level, but yet without the monotony of flatness. We were on the prairie, but still I felt no satisfaction. It was private property, divided among holders and pastured over by private cattle. Salisbury Plain is as wild, and Dartmoor almost wilder. Deer, they told me, were to be had within reach of Dixon, but for the buffalo one has to go much farther afield than Illinois. The farmer may rejoice in Illinois, but the hunter and the trapper must cross the big rivers and pass away into the Western Territories before he can find lands wild enough for his purposes. My visit to the corn-fields of Illinois was in its way successful, but I felt, as I turned my face eastward toward Chicago, that I had no right to boast that I had as yet made acquaintance with a prairie.

All minds were turned to the war, at Dixon as elsewhere. In Illinois the men boasted that, as regards the war, they were the leading State of the union. But the same boast was made in Indiana, and also in Massachusetts, and probably in half the States of the North and West. They, the Illinoisians, call their country the war-nest of the West. The population of the State is 1,700,000, and it had undertaken to furnish sixty volunteer regiments of 1000 men each. And let it be borne in mind that these regiments, when furnished, are really full--absolutely containing the thousand men when they are sent away from the parent States.

The number of souls above named will give 420,000 working men, and if, out of these, 60,000 are sent to the war, the State, which is almost purely agricultural, will have given more than one man in eight. When I was in Illinois, over forty regiments had already been sent--forty-six, if I remember rightly--and there existed no doubt whatever as to the remaining number. From the next State, Indiana, with a population of 1,350,000, giving something less than 350,000 working men, thirty-six regiments had been sent. I fear that I am mentioning these numbers usque ad nauseam; but I wish to impress upon English readers the magnitude of the effort made by the States in mustering and equipping an army within six or seven months of the first acknowledgment that such an army would be necessary. The Americans have complained bitterly of the want of English sympathy, and I think they have been weak in making that complaint. But I would not wish that they should hereafter have the power of complaining of a want of English justice. There can be no doubt that a genuine feeling of patriotism was aroused throughout the North and West, and that men rushed into the ranks actuated by that feeling, men for whom war and army life, a camp and fifteen dollars a month; would not of themselves have had any attraction. It came to that, that young men were ashamed not to go into the army. This feeling of course produced coercion, and the movement was in that way tyrannical. There is nothing more tyrannical than a strong popular feeling among a democratic people.

During the period of enlistment this tyranny was very strong. But the existence of such a tyranny proves the passion and patriotism of the people. It got the better of the love of money, of the love of children, and of the love of progress. Wives who with their bairns were absolutely dependent on their husbands' labors, would wish their husbands to be at the war. Not to conduce, in some special way, toward the war; to have neither father there, nor brother nor son; not to have lectured, or preached, or written for the war; to have made no sacrifice for the war, to have had no special and individual interest in the war, was disgraceful. One sees at a glance the tyranny of all this in such a country as the States. One can understand how quickly adverse stories would spread themselves as to the opinion of any man who chose to remain tranquil at such a time. One shudders at the absolute absence of true liberty which such a passion throughout a democratic country must engender. But he who has observed all this must acknowledge that that passion did exist. Dollars, children, progress, education, and political rivalry all gave way to the one strong national desire for the thrashing and crushing of those who had rebelled against the authority of the stars and stripes.

When we were at Dixon they were getting up the Dement regiment.

The attempt at the time did not seem to be prosperous, and the few men who had been collected had about them a forlorn, ill-conditioned look. But then, as I was told, Dixon had already been decimated and redecimated by former recruiting colonels. Colonel Dement, from whom the regiment was to be named, and whose military career was only now about to commence, had come late into the field. I did not afterward ascertain what had been his success, but I hardly doubt that he did ultimately scrape together his thousand men. "Why don't you go?" I said to a burly Irishman who was driving me. "I'm not a sound man, yer honor," said the Irishman; "I'm deficient in me liver." Taking the Irishmen, however, throughout the Union, they had not been found deficient in any of the necessaries for a career of war. I do not think that any men have done better than the Irish in the American army.

From Dixon we went to Chicago. Chicago is in many respects the most remarkable city among all the remarkable cities of the Union.

Its growth has been the fastest and its success the most assured.

同类推荐
  • 太乙元真保命长生经

    太乙元真保命长生经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 巫峡

    巫峡

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 三观义

    三观义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编家范典教子部

    明伦汇编家范典教子部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 徽城竹枝词

    徽城竹枝词

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 神误凡尘:绝色王爷调皮妃

    神误凡尘:绝色王爷调皮妃

    苏大美人自从喜出望外地成为辰王妃后,除了游手好闲还是游手好闲,原因竟是爬不上床!某女郁闷,一脸痛惜地问道辰王殿下身边的小侍卫,“你们家王爷不会是那儿有问题啊……哦!难道是断袖?”某侍卫听后愤懑极了,“王妃你这样说就不对了,我们家王爷很正常!”“正常啊……”某女主半信半疑,决定以身犯险,亲身检验。……有一天,某女使计终于放倒了辰王殿下,然后迫不及待地扑上去。上一秒,“嘿嘿,你终于是老娘的啦!”下一秒,“哎呦,怎么是床板,人呢?”某男主慵懒地倚着桌子,不动声色地拂了拂袖子,一脸鄙夷,“想睡本王,神仙都还没那本事呢!”最终,某女主梦想成真,才发现睡的人竟是九重天牛炸天的仙界继承人!
  • 从故事中学会遵纪守法(教青少年为人处事的故事宝库)

    从故事中学会遵纪守法(教青少年为人处事的故事宝库)

    《教青少年为人处事的故事宝库:从故事中学会遵纪守法》以青少年为主要读者对象。通过曹操割发自罚、孙中山不让大哥当都督、林肯替受冤人洗掉罪名等100多个古今中外历史名人、伟人遵纪守法的故事,目的是让青少年读者感受到遵纪守法的必要性。
  • 大师来自三不管

    大师来自三不管

    宇文寿杰其人清代光绪年间,尤其在中国北方,评书极为盛行,除了皇城北京,就当属天津了。其次才是济南、奉天和营口……天津评书最火爆的地方,是“三不管儿”。其实,这地方跟北京的天桥、南京的夫子庙一样,都是穷人扎堆儿、江湖艺人蚁聚之地。来“三不管儿”听评书的人,不光是穷苦人,也有阔人。当时天津最具代表性的阔人家有“八大世家”之说。说是阔人家,有的也是书香门第。除了“八大家”之外,还有一户大家,人称“西门里宇家”。宇家,复姓宇文,因祖上是从山西逃难来的天津,后在天津做生意发家,遂在天津西门里老城购置房产,从此扎根天津。
  • 时空投影

    时空投影

    我们能看见物体是因为光的反射,但我们看到的绝不是同一时间的物体景像,我们看到的是过去的物体影像,过去的时间是光走过我们和物体之间的距离所需要的时间。当我们抬头仰望星空,看到的永远是过去的星空,那些明亮闪烁的星星也许早已经是宇宙的尘埃。如果,世界的反射是在世界核战之时,它在宇宙里绕过一圈再次回来,我们是将看到过去,还是将经历一个时空错乱恐怖的未来。故事开始于世界核战之后,时空投影回来之前,一个狗血的变异进化的故事,在四维生命融入进基因后,他越来越强大,超越人类的极限,迎向即将来临的时空投影。
  • 名门小妻

    名门小妻

    用了五年的时光爱上一个人,谈婚论嫁前夕,男友却背着她和别的女人有染……
  • 末世女汉子

    末世女汉子

    对于杜若而言,重生最大的幸福就是遇见那个曾经没什么交集的美男子,他负责貌美如花,她负责打脸杀丧尸。对于夏舟来说,重生最大的幸福就是遇见那个前世一直用真心温暖他,为他而丧命的小女子。末世来了又如何?既然重生了就找到小忠犬一起大杀四方呗。
  • 秘密

    秘密

    本书解答了生活中人们关注问题的答案,如意志、思维能带来的力量;对于财富、成功的态度;对于健康的理念,旨在通过由思维理念到身体力行的转变赢得理想的人生。
  • 六道剑君

    六道剑君

    洪黎大陆,是属于人类秘籍功法争相绽放的空间,他们凭借纷繁璀璨的秘籍功法以一人之力就能达到世界的顶峰,成为传说级别的人物。因此,人人都想要得到秘籍功法,所以秘籍功法就变得越来越多,自然也就有强有弱,强的能成为万人难以匹敌的人上人,弱的只能力敌两三个大汉。而在洪黎大陆里一共分为五块地区,即北疆、南域、西界、东境、中枢。
  • 时光悠悠不曾眠

    时光悠悠不曾眠

    白欣曾经以为她是凭借自己的努力,才拥有了一切,结果等她一朝被亲人所害,来到异世,没有斗志的她,只想简单轻松得过好自己的日子,不求闻达富贵,只愿现世安稳。结果有人竟然看不下去,从此不用自己怎么动手动脑,有人指点,轻松成就了一段商业传奇。突然有一天,大家发现她在人们没有察觉的时候竟然获得这么大成就,对她钦佩不已,一个个跑来求教经验。白欣扶了扶自己的平光眼睛,看着这些人渴慕的眼神,突然有些心虚,她该说什么呢,难道说,都是上天的眷顾?躺赢的人生,该怎么解释……
  • 洞渊集-长筌子

    洞渊集-长筌子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。