"A Richmond paper says forty thousand instead of eighteen,"

Mr. Marshall remarked.

"Mr. Russell, of the London Times, estimated Beauregard's

force at sixty thousand," I said.

"He don't know!" said De Saussure.

"And Mr. Davis does not know," I added; "for the whole loss of

cannon on the Northern side that day amounted to but

seventeen. Mr. Davis may as well be wrong in one set of facts

as in another. He said also that provisions enough were taken

to feed an army of fifty thousand men for twelve months."

"Well, why not?" said Ransom, frowning.

"These gentlemen can tell you why not."

"Pretty heavy figures," said Mr. Marshall.

"Why are they not true, Miss Randolph?" Mr. de Saussure asked,

bending as before a most deferential look upon me.

"And look here, - in what interest are you, Daisy?" my brother

continued.

"Nothing is gained by blinking the truth anywhere, Ransom."

"No, that is true," said my father.

"Daisy has been under the disadvantage of hearing only one

side lately," my mother remarked very coolly.

"But about the provisions, Miss Randolph?" Mr. De Saussure

insisted, returning to the point with a willingness, I

thought, to have me speak.

"Mamma says, I have heard only one side," I answered. "But on

that side I have heard it remarked, that twelve thousand

wagons would have been required to carry those provisions to

the battlefield. I do not know if the calculation was

correct."

Mr. De Saussure's face clouded for an instant. My father

seemed to be pondering. Ransom's frowns grew more deep.

"What side are you on, Daisy?" he repeated.

"She is on her own side, of course," my mother said.

"I hope there is no doubt of that, Mrs. Randolph," said Mr.

Marshall. "Such an enemy would be very formidable! I should

begin to question on which side I was myself."

They went off into a long discussion about the probable

movements of the belligerent parties in America; what might be

expected from different generals; how long the conflict was

likely to last, and how its certain issue, the discomfiture of

the North and the independence of the South, would be

attained. Mingled with this discussion were laudations of

Jefferson Davis, scornful reviling of President Lincoln, and

sneers at the North generally; at their men, their officers,

their money, their way of making it and their way of spending

it. Triumphant anticipations, of shame and defeat to them and

the superb exaltation of the South, were scattered, like a

salt and pepper seasoning, through all the conversation. I

listened, with my nerves tingling sometimes, with my heart

throbbing at other times; sadly inclined to believe they might

be right in a part of their calculations; very sadly sure they

were wrong in everything else. I had to keep a constant guard

upon my face; happily my words were not called for. My eyes

now and then met papa's, with a look that gave and received

another sort of communication. When the evening was over, and

papa was folding me in his arms to bid me good-night, he

whispered, "You and I cannot be on two sides of anything, Daisy?"




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