Part 39 (1/2)
Southern society was melted into a single pulsing thought--the fight in defense of their homes and their liberty. In the white heat of this mighty impulse the barriers of cla.s.s and s.e.x were melted.
The most delicately reared and cultured lady of society admitted without question the right of any man who wore a gray uniform to speak to her without introduction and escort her anywhere on the streets. In not a single instance was this high privilege abused by an insult, indignity or an improper word.
Socola saw but one lady who showed the slightest displeasure.
A dainty little woman of eight, delicately trained in the ways of polite society, was shocked at the familiarity of a soldier who had dared to caress her.
She turned to her elderly companion and gasped with indignation:
”Auntie! Did you ever! Any man who wears a stripe on his pantaloons now thinks he can speak to a lady!”
Socola laughed and pa.s.sed on to inspect the camp of the famous Hampton Legion of South Carolina.
His heart went out in a sudden wave of admiration for these Southern people who could merge thus their souls and bodies into the cause of their country.
The Hampton Legion was recruited, armed and equipped and led by Wade Hampton. Its private soldiers were the flower of South Carolina's society. The dress parades of this regiment of gentlemen were the admiration of the town. The carriages that hung around their maneuvers were as gay and numerous as the a.s.semblage on a fas.h.i.+onable race course.
Each member of this famous legion went into Richmond with his trunks and body servant. They, too, were confident of a brief struggle.
A kind fate held fast the dark curtains of the future. The camp was a picnic ground, and Death was only a specter of the dim unknown.
Just as Socola strolled by the grounds, the camp spied the handsome figure of young Preston Hampton in a pair of spotless yellow kid gloves.
They caught and rolled him in the dust and spoiled his gloves.
He laughed and took it good naturedly.
The hardier sons of the South held the attention of the keen, observing eyes with stronger interest. He knew what would become of those trunks and fine clothes. The thing he wished most to know was the quality and the temper of the average man in the Southern ranks.
Socola met d.i.c.k Welford suddenly face to face, smiled and bowed. d.i.c.k hesitated, returned his recognition and offered his hand.
”Mr. Welford--”
”Signor Socola.”
d.i.c.k's greeting was a little awkward, but the older man put him at once at ease with his frank, friendly manners.
”A brave show your _Champ de Mars_, sir!”
”Does look like business, doesn't it?” d.i.c.k responded with pride. ”Would you like to go through the camps and see our men?”
”Very much.”
”Come, I'll show you.”
Two hundred yards from the camp of the Hampton Legion they found the Louisiana Zouaves of Wheat's command, small, tough-looking men with gleaming black eyes.
”Frenchmen!” d.i.c.k sneered. ”They'll fight though--”
”Their people in the old world have that reputation,” Socola dryly remarked.
Beyond them lay a regiment of fierce, be-whiskered countrymen from the lower sections of Mississippi.