It Is Surprising How
Quickly A People Can Reconcile Themselves To Altered Circumstances,
When The Change Comes Upon Them Without The Necessity Of Any
Expressed Opinion On Their Own Part.
Personal freedom has been
considered as necessary to the American of the States as the air he
breathes.
Had any suggestion been made to him of a suspension of
the privilege of habeas corpus, of a censorship of the press, or of
martial law, the American would have declared his willingness to die
on the floor of the House of Representatives, and have proclaimed
with ten million voices his inability to live under circumstances so
subversive of his rights as a man. And he would have thoroughly
believed the truth of his own assertions. Had a chance been given
of an argument on the matter, of stump speeches and caucus meetings,
these things could never have been done. But as it is, Americans
are, I think, rather proud of the suspension of the habeas corpus.
They point with gratification to the uniformly loyal tone of the
newspapers, remarking that any editor who should dare to give even a
secession squeak would immediately find himself shut up. And now
nothing but good is spoken of martial law. I thought it a nuisance
when I was prevented by soldiers from trotting my horse down
Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington; but I was assured by Americans
that such restrictions were very serviceable in a community. At St.
Louis martial law was quite popular. Why should not General Halleck
be as well able to say what was good for the people as any law or
any lawyer? He had no interest in the injury of the State, but
every interest in its preservation. "But what," I asked, "would be
the effect were he to tell you to put all your fires out at eight
o'clock?" "If he were so to order, we should do it; but we know
that he will not." But who does know to what General Halleck or
other generals may come, or how soon a curfew-bell may be ringing in
American towns? The winning of liberty is long and tedious; but the
losing it is a down-hill, easy journey.
It was here, in St. Louis, that General Fremont held his military
court. He was a great man here during those hundred days through
which his command lasted. He lived in a great house, had a body-
guard, was inaccessible as a great man should be, and fared
sumptuously every day. He fortified the city - or rather, he began
to do so. He constructed barracks here, and instituted military
prisons. The fortifications have been discontinued as useless, but
the barracks and the prisons remain. In the latter there were 1200
secessionist soldiers who had been taken in the State of Missouri.
"Why are they not exchanged?" I asked. "Because they are not
exactly soldiers," I was informed. "The secessionists do not
acknowledge them." "Then would it not be cheaper to let them go?"
"No," said my informant; "because in that case we would have to
catch them again." And so the 1200 remain in their wretched prison -
thinned from week to week and from day to day by prison disease and
prison death.
I went out twice to Benton Barracks, as the camp of wooden huts was
called, which General Fremont had erected near the fair-ground of
the city. This fair-ground, I was told, had been a pleasant place.
It had been constructed for the recreation of the city, and for the
purpose of periodical agricultural exhibitions. There is still in
it a pretty ornamented cottage, and in the little garden a solitary
Cupid stood, dismayed by the dirt and ruin around him. In the fair-
green are the round buildings intended for show cattle and
agricultural implements, but now given up to cavalry horses and
Parrott guns. But Benton Barracks are outside the fair-green. Here
on an open space, some half mile in length, two long rows of wooden
sheds have been built, opposite to each other, and behind them are
other sheds used for stabling and cooking places. Those in front
are divided, not into separate huts, but into chambers capable of
containing nearly two hundred men each. They were surrounded on the
inside by great wooden trays, in three tiers - and on each tray four
men were supposed to sleep. I went into one or two while the crowd
of soldiers was in them, but found it inexpedient to stay there
long. The stench of those places was foul beyond description.
Never in my life before had I been in a place so horrid to the eyes
and nose as Benton Barracks. The path along the front outside was
deep in mud. The whole space between the two rows of sheds was one
field of mud, so slippery that the foot could not stand. Inside and
outside every spot was deep in mud. The soldiers were mud-stained
from foot to sole. These volunteer soldiers are in their nature
dirty, as must be all men brought together in numerous bodies
without special appliances for cleanliness, or control and
discipline as to their personal habits. But the dirt of the men in
the Benton Barracks surpassed any dirt that I had hitherto seen.
Nor could it have been otherwise with them. They were surrounded by
a sea of mud, and the foul hovels in which they were made to sleep
and live were fetid with stench and reeking with filth. I had at
this time been joined by another Englishman, and we went through
this place together. When we inquired as to the health of the men,
we heard the saddest tales - of three hundred men gone out of one
regiment, of whole companies that had perished, of hospitals crowded
with fevered patients. Measles had been the great scourge of the
soldiers here - as it had also been in the army of the Potomac. I
shall not soon forget my visits to Benton Barracks.
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