107. A Midnight Flight
BY ELIZA RIPLEY (1862)
THE only exact date I can remember, and that I never forget,
was the 17th of December.
The weather was warm for the season, a thick fog hung over
the river, obscuring objects only a few yards distant. As I
stood by the window, in the early morning, completing my
toilet, the white, misty curtain rolled up like a scroll, revealing
a fleet of gunboats. Far as the eye could reach, up and down
and around our point, the river was bristling with
[_]
An account of the leaving of a plantation on the Mississippi River.
gayly flagged transports, anchored mid-stream, waiting for the
dissipation of the mist to proceed. In a twinkling all was
excitement with the hurry and bustle of our immediate
departure.
A breakfast eaten "on the fly "as it were, a rushing here and
there, and packing of necessaries for our journey, God only
knew whither, we did not care where, so we escaped a
repetition of scenes that had made us old before our time, and
life a constant excitement that was burning us up. William was
despatched to the city on a tour of observation. He returned,
to report ten thousand men and the most warlike
demonstrations that the darky's genius could invent; pickets
to be stationed away beyond Arlington, and all of us to be
embraced within the lines and made to "toe de mark.""Mars
Jim, and every white man what harbored a Confederate soldier
de time of de fight, was to be tuk prisoner."The more William
told, the more he remembered to tell; and, long before he was
through with his recital, I was perplexed, bewildered, and
almost distracted.
The negro men were summoned from their quarters to help
load the wagon. We put in cooking utensils, some dishes and
plates, bedding and a small mattress, a few kegs and boxes of
necessary provisions, a trunk of clothing, some small bags
and bundles—that was all.
The mules safely locked in the stable, the harnesses all ready
to slip on, extra straps and ropes thrown into the wagon—too
excited to sleep, we threw ourselves on our beds for the last
time; too tired to talk, sore at heart; too worn out to weep.
There we lay in a fitful and uneasy slumber. In the dead
stillness of the night there came a low tap at our chamber
door. "Mars Jim! "My husband was on his feet with a bound.
"Your niggers is all gone to de Yankees; de pickets is on our
place, and dey done told your niggers you would be arrested
at daylight."The speaker was head sugar maker on an
adjoining plantation, himself a slave. "Call Dominick and tell
him to get my buggy ready while I put on some clothes,"was
the only response. I lighted the candle and hurried my
husband off—, while he whispered directions for me to join him
immediately after breakfast at the house of a neighbor, five
miles back of us, which he could speedily reach by going
through the woods, and to have one of the men drive the
wagon, and one drive the ambulance through the'longer but
better wagon-road.
That was all—and he was gone. I did not lie down again, but
wandered around in an aimless sort of way, too distracted to
do a useful or sensible thing.
At the first appearance of dawn I aroused William to prepare
breakfast, and Charlotte to get the table ready. Before the
children were awake, I was down at the stable, having William
and Willy hitch up the teams. I saw with half an eye that
William was not in sympathy with our plans, and knew
intuitively that my husband distrusted him. He who had been
my husband's valet in his gay bachelor days and our
confidential servant, our very aid and help in all my bright
married life, had had his poor woolly head turned by that one
trip to town, and asserted his independence at the first
shadow of provocation. William failing me, I knew I must seek
other help.
Being ready and eager to start, I immediately went down to the
quarters, a half-mile distant; there I waited, going from cabin
to cabin, and walked to the
[_]
William wanted to be free.
dwelling-house and back again. Willy stood by the hitched-up
teams, and Sabe, near by, held the baby in her arms, while little
Henry clung to her skirts. Then back to the quarters. This man
"had a misery in his back—had had it ever since the crevasse "
; that man "never druv in his life—didn't I know he was de
engineer?"Another man "wouldn't drive old Sall-she was de
balkiest mule on de place; you won't get a mile from here 'fore
she takes de contraries, and won't budge a step."
I could have sat down and wept my very heart out. It was long
past noon; the harnessed mules had to be fed, and William
made out to say: "We had better take a little snack, and give it
up; if we stayed home, Mars Jim would come back; the
Yankees didn't have nothin' 'gin him."
At last old Dave said he "warn't no hand wid mules, but he
'lowed he could tackle old Sal till she balked."There was no
time for bargaining for another driver now. I caught at Dave's
offer before he knew it, only stopping long enough to bid all
the deluded creatures a hasty goodby.
Dave was hurried by my rapid steps back to the stable, and
Sabe came out with the tired children. just as I thought we
were fairly off, William announced, "Sence you was gone a
Yankee gunboat is cum down, and I see it's anchored 'tween us
and Kernel Hickey's."A peep around the corner of the house
confirmed the truth of his statement. Hastily grasping a carpet-bag, lying ready packed in the ambulance, I ascended to my
bedroom, took from it two large pockets quilted thick with
jewels which I secured about my person, while Charlotte put
the breakfast forks and spoons in the bottom of the bag.
When I returned to the teams, everybody was standing about,
apparently waiting to see what "Miss 'Lize "would do now.
Summoning every effort to command a voice whose quaver
must have betrayed my intense emotion, I directed Willy to
mount the wagon, a few last baskets and packages were
tossed into the ambulance, and Henry's little pony tied behind.
I got in, then the little ones and Sabe; Dave shambled into his
place in front; the curtain cutting off the driver's seat was
carefully rolled up, so I could have an unobstructed view, and
Willy was told to lead the way.
So I rode away from Arlington, leaving the sugarhouse
crowded to its utmost capacity with the entire crop of sugar
and molasses of the previous year for which we had been
unable to find a market within 96 our lines,"leaving cattle
grazing in the fields, sheep wandering over the levee, doors
and windows flung wide open, furniture in the rooms, clothes
too fine for me to wear now hanging in the armoires, china in
the closets, pictures on the walls, beds unmade, table spread.
It was late in the afternoon of that bright, clear, bracing day,
December 18, 1862, that I bade Arlington adieu forever.