<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 37 </h2>
<p>As soon as Lincoln was elected the attitude of the South showed clearly
that 'the irrepressible conflict', of Mr Seward's naming, had only just
begun. The Herald gave columns every day to the news of 'the coming
Revolution', as it was pleased to call it. There was loud talk of war at
and after the great Pine Street meeting of December 15. South Carolina
seceded, five days later, and then we knew what was coming, albeit, we saw
only the dim shadow of that mighty struggle that was to shake the earth
for nearly five years. The Printer grew highly irritable those days and
spoke of Buchanan and Davis and Toombs in language so violent it could
never have been confined in type. But while a bitter foe none was more
generous than he and, when the war was over, his money went to bail the
very man he had most roundly damned.</p>
<p>I remember that one day, when he was sunk deep in composition, a negro
came and began with grand airs to make a request as delegate from his
campaign club. The Printer sat still, his eyes close to the paper, his pen
flying at high speed. The coloured orator went on lifting his voice in a
set petition. Mr Greeley bent to his work as the man waxed eloquent. A
nervous movement now and then betrayed the Printer's irritation. He looked
up, shortly, his face kindling with anger.</p>
<p>'Help! For God's sake!' he shrilled impatiently, his hands flying in the
air. The Printer seemed to be gasping for breath.</p>
<p>'Go and stick your head out of the window and get through,' he shouted
hotly to the man.</p>
<p>He turned to his writing—a thing dearer to him than a new bone to a
hungry dog.</p>
<p>'Then you may come and tell me what you want,' he added in a milder tone.</p>
<p>Those were days when men said what they meant and their meaning had more
fight in it than was really polite or necessary. Fight was in the air and
before I knew it there was a wild, devastating spirit in my own bosom, insomuch
that I made haste to join a local regiment. It grew apace but not until I
saw the first troops on their way to the war was I fully determined to go
and give battle with my regiment.</p>
<p>The town was afire with patriotism. Sumter had fallen; Lincoln had issued
his first call. The sound of the fife and drum rang in the streets. Men
gave up work to talk and listen or go into the sterner business of war.
Then one night in April, a regiment came out of New England, on its way to
the front. It lodged at the Astor House to leave at nine in the morning.
Long before that hour the building was flanked and fronted with tens of
thousands, crowding Broadway for three blocks, stuffing the wide mouth of
Park Row and braced into Vesey and Barday Streets. My editor assigned me
to this interesting event. I stood in the crowd, that morning, and saw
what was really the beginning of the war in New York. There was no babble
of voices, no impatient call, no sound of idle jeering such as one is apt
to hear in a waiting crowd. It stood silent, each man busy with the rising
current of his own emotions, solemnified by the faces all around him. The
soldiers filed out upon the pavement, the police having kept a way clear
for them, Still there was silence in the crowd save that near me I could
hear a man sobbing. A trumpeter lifted his bugle and sounded a bar of the
reveille. The clear notes clove the silent air, flooding every street
about us with their silver sound. Suddenly the band began playing. The
tune was Yankee Doodle. A wild, dismal, tremulous cry came out of a throat
near me. It grew and spread to a mighty roar and then such a shout went up
to Heaven, as I had never heard, and as I know full well I shall never
hear again. It was like the riving of thunderbolts above the roar of
floods—elemental, prophetic, threatening, ungovernable. It did seem
to me that the holy wrath of God Almighty was in that cry of the people.
It was a signal. It declared that they were ready to give all that a man
may give for that he loves—his life and things far dearer to him
than his life. After that, they and their sons begged for a chance to
throw themselves into the hideous ruin of war.</p>
<p>I walked slowly back to the office and wrote my article. When the Printer
came in at twelve I went to his room before he had had time to begin work.</p>
<p>'Mr Greeley,' I said, 'here is my resignation. I am going to the war.'</p>
<p>His habitual smile gave way to a sober look as he turned to me, his big
white coat on his arm. He pursed his lips and blew thoughtfully. Then he
threw his coat in a chair and wiped his eyes with his handkerchief.</p>
<p>'Well! God bless you, my boy,' he said. 'I wish I could go, too.'</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />