She Has Absolutely Nothing Of The
Kind, And Seems To Be Pitifully Helpless And Incapable Of Thinking For
Herself.
Soon after I got home this morning and was trying to get a little
sleep, I heard screams and
An awful commotion across the hall in one
of Mrs. Hunt's rooms, and running over to see what was the matter, I
found Mrs. Hunt standing upon a chair, and her cook running around
like a madman, with a stick of wood in his hand, upsetting furniture
and whacking things generally. I naturally thought of a mouse, and not
being afraid of them, I went on in and closed the door. I doubt if
Mrs. Hunt saw me, she was so intently watching the man, who kept on
upsetting things. He stopped finally, and then held up on the wood a
snake - a dead rattlesnake! We measured it, and it was over two feet
long.
You can see how the house is built by the photograph I sent you, that
there are no chimneys, and that the stovepipes go straight up through
the pole and sod roof. The children insist that the snake came down
the pipe in the liveliest kind of a way, so it must have crawled up
the logs to the roof, and finding the warmth of the pipe, got too
close to the opening and slipped through. However that may be, he got
into the room where the three little children were playing alone.
Fortunately, the oldest recognized the danger at once, and ran
screaming to her mother, the other two following. Mrs. Hunt was almost
ill over the affair, and Major Hunt kept a man on top and around the
old house hunting for snakes, until we began to fear it would be
pulled down on our heads.
This country itself is bad enough, and the location of the post is
most unfortunate, but to compel officers and men to live in these old
huts of decaying, moldy wood, which are reeking with malaria and alive
with bugs, and perhaps snakes, is wicked. Officers' families are not
obliged to remain here, of course.
But at dreadful places like this is where the plucky army wife is most
needed. Her very presence has often a refining and restraining
influence over the entire garrison, from the commanding officer down
to the last recruit. No one can as quickly grasp the possibilities of
comfort in quarters like these, or as bravely busy herself to fix them
up. She knows that the stay is indefinite, that it may be for six
months, or possibly six years, but that matters not. It is her army
home - Brass Button's home - and however discouraging its condition may
be, for his sake she pluckily, and with wifely pride, performs
miracles, always making the house comfortable and attractive.
FORT DODGE, KANSAS,
January, 1873.
OUR coming here was most unexpected and very unpleasant in every way.
General Phillips and Major Barker quarreled over something, and Major
Barker preferred charges against the general, who is his company
commander, and now General Phillips is being tried here by general
court martial. Faye and I were summoned as witnesses by Major Barker,
just because we heard a few words that were said in front of our
window late one night! The court has thoughtfully excused me from
going into the court room, as I could only corroborate Faye's
testimony. I am so relieved, for it would have been a terrible ordeal
to have gone in that room where all those officers are sitting, in
full-dress uniform, too, and General Phillips with them. I would have
been too frightened to have remembered one thing, or to have known
whether I was telling the truth or not.
General Dickinson and Ben dark, his interpreter, came up in the
ambulance with us, and the poor general is now quite ill, the result
of an ice bath in the Arkansas River! When we started to come across
on the ice here at the ford, the mule leaders broke through and fell
down on the river bottom, and being mules, not only refused to get up,
but insisted upon keeping their noses under the water. The wheelers
broke through, too, but had the good sense to stand on their feet, but
they gave the ambulance such a hard jerk that the front wheels broke
off more ice and went down to the river bottom, also. By the time all
this had occurred, I was the only one left inside, and found myself
very busy trying to keep myself from slipping down under the front
seat, where water had already come in. General Dickinson and Faye were
doing everything possible to assist the men.
Just how it was accomplished would make too long a story to tell, but
in a short time the leaders were dragged out and on their feet, and
the rear wheels of the ambulance let down on the river bottom, and
then we were all pulled up on the ice again, and came on to the post
in safety. All but General Dickinson, who undertook to hold out of the
water the heads of the two leaders who seemed determined to commit
suicide by keeping their noses down, the general forgetting for once
that he was commanding officer. But one of those government mules did
not forget, and with a sudden jerk of his big head he pulled the
general over and down from the ice into the water, and in such a way
that he was wedged tight in between the two animals. One would have
expected much objection on the part of the mules to the fishing out of
the general, but those two mules kept perfectly still, apparently
satisfied with the mischief that had already been done. I can fancy
that there is one mule still chuckling over the fact of having gotten
even with a commanding officer! It is, quite warm now, and the ice has
gone out of the river, so there will he no trouble at the ford
to-morrow, when we start back.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 23 of 109
Words from 22467 to 23485
of 110651