第59章 THE JACOBIN CLUB(1)

The keen Englishman who had observed the beauty of the Virginian woods on "Bull Run Sunday,"said,after the battle was lost,"I hope Senator Wilson is satisfied."He was sneering at the whole group of intemperate Senators none of whom had ever smelled powder,but who knew it all when it came to war;who had done their great share in driving the President and the generals into a premature advance.Senator Wilson was one of those who went out to Manassas to see the Confederacy overthrown,that fateful Sunday.He was one of the most precipitate among those who fled back to Washington.On the way,driving furiously,amid a press of men and vehicles,he passed a carriage containing four Congressmen who were taking their time.Perhaps irritated by their coolness,he shouted to them to make haste."If we were in as big a hurry as you are,"replied Congressman Riddle,scornfully,"we would."These four Congressmen played a curiously dramatic part before they got back to Washington.So did a party of Senators with whom they joined force&This other party,at the start,also numbered four.They had planned a jolly picnic--this day that was to prove them right in hurrying the government into battle!--and being wise men who knew how to take time by the forelock,they had taken their luncheon with them.From what is known of Washington and Senators,then as now,one may risk a good deal that the luncheon was worth while.Part of the tragedy of that day was the accidental break-up of this party with the result amid the confusion of a road crowded by pleasure-seekers,that two Senators went one way carrying off the luncheon,while the other two,making the best of the disaster,continued southward through those beautiful early hours when Russell was admiring the scenery,their luncheon all to seek.The lucky men with the luncheon were the Senators Benjamin Wade and Zachary Chandler.Senator Trumbull and Senator Grimes,both on horseback,were left to their own devices.However,fortune was with them.Several hours later they had succeeded in getting food by the wayside and were resting in a grove of trees some distance beyond the village of Centerville.

Suddenly,they suffered an appalling surprise;happening to look up,they beheld emerging out of the distance,a stampede of men and horses which came thundering down the country road,not a hundred yards from where they sat."We immediately mounted our horses,"as Trumbull wrote to his wife the next day,"and galloped to the road,by which time it was crowded,hundreds being in advance on the way to Centerville and two guns of Sherman's battery having already passed in full retreat.

We kept on with the crowd,not knowing what else to do.We fed our horses at Centerville and left there at six o'clock...

.Came on to Fairfax Court House where we got supper and,leaving there at ten o'clock reached home at half past two this morning....I am dreadfully disappointed and mortified."[1]

Meanwhile,what of those other gay picnickers,Senator Wade and Senator Chandler?They drove in a carriage.Viewing the obligations of the hour much as did C.C.Clay at the President's reception,they were armed.Wade had "his famous rifle"which he had brought with him to Congress,which at times in the fury of debate he had threatened to use,which had become a byword.These Senators seem to have ventured nearer to the front than did Trumbull and Grimes,and were a little later in the retreat At a "choke-up,"still on the far side of Centerville,their carriage passed the carriage of the four Congressmen--who,by the way,were also armed,having among them "four of the largest navy revolvers."All these men,whatever their faults or absurdities,were intrepid.The Congressmen,at least,were in no good humor,for they had driven through a regiment of three months men whose time expired that day and who despite the cannon in the distance were hurrying home.

The race of the fugitives continued.At Centerville,the Congressmen passed Wade.Soon afterward Wade passed them for the second time.About a mile out of Fairfax Court House,"at the foot of a long down grade,the pike on the northerly side was fenced and ran along a farm.On the other side for a considerable distance was a wood,utterly impenetrable for men or animals,larger than cats or squirrels."Here the Wade carriage stopped.The congressional carriage drove up beside it.The two blocked a narrow way where as in the case of Horatius at the bridge,"a thousand might well be stopped by three."And then "bluff Ben Wade"showed the mettle that was in him.The "old Senator,his hat well back on his head,"sprang out of his carriage,his rifle in his hand,and called to the others,"Boys,we'll stop this damned runaway."And they did it.Only six of them,but they lined up across that narrow road;presented their weapons and threatened to shoot;seized the bridles of horses and flung the horses back on their haunches;checked a panic-stricken army;held it at bay,until just when it seemed they were about to be overwhelmed,military reserves hurrying out from Fairfax Court House,took command of the road.Cool,unpretentious Riddle calls the episode "Wade's exploit,"and adds "it was much talked of."The newspapers dealt with it extravagantly.[2]

Gallant as the incident was,it was all the military service that "Ben"Wade and "Zach"Chandler--for thus they are known in history-over saw.But one may believe that it had a lasting effect upon their point of view and on that of their friend Lyman Trumbull.Certain it is that none of the three thereafter had any doubts about putting the military men in their place.All the error of their own view previous to Bull Run was forgotten.Wade and Chandler,especially,when military questions were in dispute,felt that no one possibly could know more of the subject than did the men who stopped the rout in the narrow road beyond Fairfax.