<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
<div class="chaptop">
<p>NEW YEAR IN THE CRIMEA—GOOD NEWS—THE ARMISTICE—BARTER
WITH THE RUSSIANS—WAR AND PEACE—TIDINGS OF PEACE—EXCURSIONS
INTO THE INTERIOR OF THE CRIMEA—TO SIMPHEROPOL,
BAKTCHISERAI, ETC.—THE TROOPS BEGIN TO LEAVE THE CRIMEA—FRIENDS’
FAREWELLS—THE CEMETERIES—WE REMOVE FROM SPRING
HILL TO BALACLAVA—ALARMING SACRIFICE OF OUR STOCK—A LAST
GLIMPSE OF SEBASTOPOL—HOME!</p>
</div>
<p>Before the New Year was far advanced we all began to think
of going home, making sure that peace would soon be concluded.
And never did more welcome message come anywhere
than that which brought us intelligence of the armistice,
and the firing, which had grown more and more slack
lately, ceased altogether. Of course the army did not
desire peace because they had any distaste for fighting; so
far from it, I believe the only more welcome intelligence
would have been news of a campaign in the field, but they
were most heartily weary of sieges, and the prospect of
another year before the gloomy north of Sebastopol damped
the ardour of the most sanguine. Before the armistice
was signed, the Russians and their old foes made advances
of friendship, and the banks of the Tchernaya used to be
thronged with strangers, and many strange acquaintances
were thus began. I was one of the first to ride down to
the Tchernaya, and very much delighted seemed the
Russians to see an English woman. I wonder if they
thought they all had my complexion. I soon entered
heartily into the then current amusement—that of exchanging
coin, etc., with the Russians. I stole a march
upon my companions by making the sign of the cross upon
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</SPAN></span>
my bosom, upon which a Russian threw me, in exchange
for some pence, a little metal figure of some ugly saint.
Then we wrapped up halfpence in clay, and received coins
of less value in exchange. Seeing a soldier eating some
white bread, I made signs of wanting some, and threw
over a piece of money. I had great difficulty in making
the man understand me, but after considerable pantomime,
with surprise in his round bullet eyes, he wrapped up his
bread in some paper, then coated it with clay and sent it
over to me. I thought it would look well beside my
brown bread taken from the strange oven in the terrible
Redan, and that the two would typify war and peace.
There was a great traffic going on in such things, and a wag
of an officer, who could talk Russian imperfectly, set himself
to work to persuade an innocent Russian that I was his
wife, and having succeeded in doing so promptly offered to
dispose of me for the medal hanging at his breast.</p>
<p>The last firing of any consequence was the salutes with
which the good tidings of peace were received by army
and navy. After this soon began the home-going with
happy faces and light hearts, and some kind thoughts and
warm tears for the comrades left behind.</p>
<p>I was very glad to hear of peace, also, although it
must have been apparent to every one that it would cause
our ruin. We had lately made extensive additions to our
store and out-houses—our shelves were filled with articles
laid in at a great cost, and which were now unsaleable,
and which it would be equally impossible to carry home.
Everything, from our stud of horses and mules down to our
latest consignments from home, must be sold for any price;
and, as it happened, for many things, worth a year ago
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</SPAN></span>
their weight in gold, no purchaser could now be found.
However, more of this hereafter.</p>
<p>Before leaving the Crimea, I made various excursions
into the interior, visiting Simpheropol and Baktchiserai.
I travelled to Simpheropol with a pretty large party, and
had a very amusing journey. My companions were young
and full of fun, and tried hard to persuade the Russians
that I was Queen Victoria, by paying me the most absurd
reverence. When this failed they fell back a little, and
declared that I was the Queen’s first cousin. Anyhow,
they attracted crowds about me, and I became quite a
lioness in the streets of Simpheropol, until the arrival of
some Highlanders in their uniform cut me out.</p>
<p>My excursion to Baktchiserai was still more amusing
and pleasant. I found it necessary to go to beat up a
Russian merchant, who, after the declaration of peace, had
purchased stores of us, and some young officers made
up a party for the purpose. We hired an araba, filled it
with straw, and some boxes to sit upon, and set out very
early, with two old umbrellas to shield us from the mid-day
sun and the night dews. We had with us a hamper
carefully packed, before parting, with a cold duck, some
cold meat, a tart, etc. The Tartar’s two horses were soon
knocked up, and the fellow obtained a third at a little
village, and so we rolled on until mid-day, when,
thoroughly exhausted, we left our clumsy vehicle and
carried our hamper beneath the shade of a beautiful cherry-tree,
and determined to lunch. Upon opening it the first
thing that met our eyes was a fine rat, who made a speedy
escape. Somewhat gravely, we proceeded to unpack its
contents, without caring to express our fears to one
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</SPAN></span>
another, and quite soon enough we found them realized.
How or where the rat had gained access to our hamper it
was impossible to say, but he had made no bad use of his
time, and both wings of the cold duck had flown, while
the tart was considerably mangled. Sad discovery this for
people who, although, hungry, were still squeamish. We
made out as well as we could with the cold beef, and gave
the rest to our Tartar driver, who had apparently no disinclination
to eating after the rat, and would very likely
have despised us heartily for such weakness. After dinner
we went on more briskly, and succeeded in reaching
Baktchiserai. My journey was perfectly unavailing. I
could not find my debtor at home, and if I had I was told
it would take three weeks before the Russian law would
assist me to recover my claim. Determined, however, to
have some compensation, I carried off a raven, who had
been croaking angrily at my intrusion. Before we had
been long on our homeward journey, however, Lieut.
C—— sat upon it, of course accidentally, and we threw it
to its relatives—the crows.</p>
<p>As the spring advanced, the troops began to move away
at a brisk pace. As they passed the Iron House upon the
Col—old for the Crimea, where so much of life’s action had
been compressed into so short a space of time—they would
stop and give us a parting cheer, while very often the band
struck up some familiar tune of that home they were so
gladly seeking. And very often the kind-hearted officers
would find time to run into the British Hotel to bid us
good-bye, and give us a farewell shake of the hand; for
you see war, like death, is a great leveller, and mutual
suffering and endurance had made us all friends. “My dear
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</SPAN></span>
Mrs. Seacole, and my dear Mr. Day,” wrote one on a scrap
of paper left on the counter, “I have called here four
times this day, to wish you good-bye. I am so sorry I was
not fortunate enough to see you. I shall still hope to see
you to-morrow morning. We march at seven a.m.”</p>
<p>And yet all this going home seemed strange and somewhat
sad, and sometimes I felt that I could not sympathise
with the glad faces and happy hearts of those who were
looking forward to the delights of home, and the joy of
seeing once more the old familiar faces remembered so
fondly in the fearful trenches and the hard-fought battle-fields.
Now and then we would see a lounger with a
blank face, taking no interest in the bustle of departure,
and with him I acknowledged to have more fellow-feeling
than with the others, for he, as well as I, clearly had no
home to go to. He was a soldier by choice and necessity,
as well as by profession. He had no home, no loved
friends; the peace would bring no particular pleasure to
him, whereas war and action were necessary to his
existence, gave him excitement, occupation, the chance
of promotion. Now and then, but seldom, however, you
came across such a disappointed one. Was it not so with
me? Had I not been happy through the months of toil
and danger, never knowing what fear or depression was,
finding every moment of the day mortgaged hours in
advance, and earning sound sleep and contentment by sheer
hard work? What better or happier lot could possibly
befall me? And, alas! how likely was it that my present
occupation gone, I might long in vain for another so
stirring and so useful. Besides which, it was pretty sure
that I should go to England poorer than I left it, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</SPAN></span>
although I was not ashamed of poverty, beginning life
again in the autumn—I mean late in the summer of life—is
hard up-hill work.</p>
<p>Peace concluded, the little jealousies which may have
sprung up between the French and their allies seemed forgotten,
and every one was anxious, ere the parting came,
to make the most of the time yet left in improving old
friendships and founding new. Among others, the 47th,
encamped near the Woronzoff Road, gave a grand parting
entertainment to a large company of their French neighbours,
at which many officers of high rank were present.
I was applied to by the committee of management to superintend
the affair, and, for the last time in the Crimea, the
health of Madame Seacole was proposed and duly honoured.
I had grown so accustomed to the honour that I had no
difficulty in returning thanks in a speech which Colonel
B—— interpreted amid roars of laughter to the French
guests.</p>
<p>As the various regiments moved off, I received many
acknowledgments from those who thought they owed me
gratitude. Little presents, warm farewell words, kind
letters full of grateful acknowledgments for services so
small that I had forgotten them long, long ago—how easy
it is to reach warm hearts!—little thoughtful acts of kindness,
even from the humblest. And these touched me the
most. I value the letters received from the working men
far more than the testimonials of their officers. I had
nothing to gain from the former, and can point to their
testimony fearlessly. I am strongly tempted to insert
some of these acknowledgments, but I will confine myself
to one:—</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</SPAN></span>
<p class="address">“Camp, near Karani, June 16, 1856.</p>
<p>“<span class="smcap">My dear Mrs. Seacole</span>,—As you are about to leave
the Crimea, I avail myself of the only opportunity which
may occur for some time, to acknowledge my gratitude to
you, and to thank you for the kindness which I, in common
with many others, received at your hands, when attacked
with cholera in the spring of 1855. But I have no language
to do it suitably.</p>
<p>“I am truly sensible that your kindness far exceeded
my claims upon your sympathy. It is said by some of
your friends, I hope truly, that you are going to England.
There can be none from the Crimea more welcome there,
for your kindness in the sick-tent, and your heroism in the
battle-field, have endeared you to the whole army.</p>
<p>“I am sure when her most gracious Majesty the Queen
shall have become acquainted with the service you have
gratuitously rendered to so many of her brave soldiers, her
generous heart will thank you. For you have been an
instrument in the hands of the Almighty to preserve many
a gallant heart to the empire, to fight and win her battles,
if ever again war may become a necessity. Please to
accept this from your most grateful humble servant,</p>
<p class="sig">“<span class="smcap">W. J. Tynan</span>.”</p>
</div>
<p>But I had other friends in the Crimea—friends who
could never thank me. Some of them lay in their last
sleep, beneath indistinguishable mounds of earth; some in
the half-filled trenches, a few beneath the blue waters of
the Euxine. I might in vain attempt to gather the wild
flowers which sprung up above many of their graves, but
I knew where some lay, and could visit their last homes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</SPAN></span>
on earth. And to all the cemeteries where friends rested so
calmly, sleeping well after a life’s work nobly done, I
went many times, lingering long over many a mound that
bore the names of those whom I had been familiar with
in life, thinking of what they had been, and what I had
known of them. Over some I planted shrubs and flowers,
little lilac trees, obtained with no small trouble, and flowering
evergreens, which looked quite gay and pretty ere I left,
and may in time become great trees, and witness strange
scenes, or be cut down as fuel for another besieging army—who
can tell? And from many graves I picked up pebbles,
and plucked simple wild-flowers, or tufts of grass, as
memorials for relatives at home. How pretty the cemeteries
used to look beneath the blue peaceful sky; neatly
enclosed with stone walls, and full of the grave-stones
reared by friends over friends. I met many here, thoughtfully
taking their last look of the resting-places of those
they knew and loved. I saw many a proud head bowed
down above them. I knew that many a proud heart laid
aside its pride here, and stood in the presence of death,
humble and childlike. And by the clasped hand and
moistened eye, I knew that from many a heart sped upward
a grateful prayer to the Providence which had
thought fit in his judgment to take some, and in his
mercy to spare the rest.</p>
<p>Some three weeks before the Crimea was finally evacuated,
we moved from our old quarters to Balaclava, where
we had obtained permission to fit up a store for the short
time which would elapse before the last red coat left
Russian soil. The poor old British Hotel! We could do
nothing with it. The iron house was pulled down, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</SPAN></span>
packed up for conveyance home, but the Russians got all of
the out-houses and sheds which was not used as fuel. All
the kitchen fittings and stoves, that had cost us so much,
fell also into their hands. I only wish some cook worthy
to possess them has them now. We could sell nothing.
Our horses were almost given away, our large stores of
provisions, etc., were at any one’s service. It makes my
heart sick to talk of the really alarming sacrifices we made.
The Russians crowded down ostensibly to purchase, in
reality to plunder. Prime cheeses, which had cost us tenpence
a pound, were sold to them for less than a penny a pound;
for wine, for which we had paid forty-eight shillings a
dozen, they bid four shillings. I could not stand this, and
in a fit of desperation, I snatched up a hammer and broke
up case after case, while the bystanders held out their
hands and caught the ruby stream. It may have been
wrong, but I was too excited to think. There was no
more of my own people to give it to, and I would rather
not present it to our old foes.</p>
<p>We were among the last to leave the Crimea. Before
going I borrowed a horse, easy enough now, and rode up
the old well-known road—how unfamiliar in its loneliness
and quiet—to Cathcart’s Hill. I wished once more to impress
the scene upon my mind. It was a beautifully clear
evening, and we could see miles away across the darkening
sea. I spent some time there with my companions, pointing
out to each other the sites of scenes we all remembered
so well. There were the trenches, already becoming indistinguishable,
out of which, on the 8th of September, we
had seen the storming parties tumble in confused and
scattered bodies, before they ran up the broken height of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</SPAN></span>
the Redan. There the Malakhoff, into which we had also
seen the luckier French pour in one unbroken stream;
below lay the crumbling city and the quiet harbour, with
scarce a ripple on its surface, while around stretched
away the deserted huts for miles. It was with something
like regret that we said to one another that the play was
fairly over, that peace had rung the curtain down, and that
we, humble actors in some of its most stirring scenes, must
seek engagements elsewhere.</p>
<p>I lingered behind, and stooping down, once more
gathered little tufts of grass, and some simple blossoms
from above the graves of some who in life had been very
kind to me, and I left behind, in exchange, a few tears
which were sincere.</p>
<p>A few days latter, and I stood on board a crowded
steamer, taking my last look of the shores of the Crimea.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CONCLUSION" id="CONCLUSION"></SPAN>CONCLUSION.</h2>
<p>I did not return to England by the most direct route, but
took the opportunity of seeing more of men and manners
in yet other lands. Arrived in England at last, we set to
work bravely at Aldershott to retrieve our fallen fortunes,
and stem off the ruin originated in the Crimea, but all in
vain; and at last defeated by fortune, but not I think disgraced,
we were obliged to capitulate on very honourable
conditions. In plain truth, the old Crimean firm of Seacole
and Day was dissolved finally, and its partners had to
recommence the world anew. And so ended <em>our</em> campaign.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</SPAN></span>
One of us started only the other day for the Antipodes,
while the other is ready to take any journey to any place
where a stout heart and two experienced hands may be
of use.</p>
<p>Perhaps it would be right if I were to express more
shame and annoyance than I really feel at the pecuniarily
disastrous issue of my Crimean adventures, but I cannot—I
really cannot. When I would try and feel ashamed of
myself for being poor and helpless, I only experience a
glow of pride at the other and more pleasing events of my
career; when I think of the few whom I failed to pay in
full (and so far from blaming me some of them are now
my firmest friends), I cannot help remembering also the
many who profess themselves indebted to me.</p>
<p>Let me, in as few words as possible, state the results
of my Crimean campaign. To be sure, I returned from it
shaken in health. I came home wounded, as many others
did. Few constitutions, indeed, were the better for those
winters before Sebastopol, and I was too hard worked not
to feel their effects; for a little labour fatigues me now—I
cannot watch by sick-beds as I could—a week’s want of
rest quite knocks me up now. Then I returned bankrupt
in fortune. Whereas others in my position may have come
back to England rich and prosperous, I found myself
poor—beggared. So few words can tell what I have lost.</p>
<p>But what have I gained? I should need a volume to
describe that fairly; so much is it, and so cheaply purchased
by suffering ten times worse than what I have experienced.
I have more than once heard people say that they would
gladly suffer illness to enjoy the delights of convalescence,
and so, by enduring a few days’ pain, gain the tender love
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</SPAN></span>
of relatives and sympathy of friends. And on this principle
I rejoice in the trials which have borne me such
pleasures as those I now enjoy, for wherever I go I am
sure to meet some smiling face; every step I take in the
crowded London streets may bring me in contact with
some friend, forgotten by me, perhaps, but who soon
reminds me of our old life before Sebastopol; it seems
very long ago now, when I was of use to him and he
to me.</p>
<p>Where, indeed, do I not find friends. In omnibuses,
in river steamboats, in places of public amusement, in
quiet streets and courts, where taking short cuts I lose my
way oft-times, spring up old familiar faces to remind me of
the months spent on Spring Hill. The sentries at Whitehall
relax from the discharge of their important duty of
guarding nothing to give me a smile of recognition; the
very newspaper offices look friendly as I pass them by;
busy Printing-house Yard puts on a cheering smile, and
the <i>Punch</i> office in Fleet Street sometimes laughs outright.
Now, would all this have happened if I had returned to
England a rich woman? Surely not.</p>
<p>A few words more ere I bring these egotistical remarks
to a close. It is naturally with feelings of pride and pleasure
that I allude to the committee recently organized to
aid me; and if I indulge in the vanity of placing their
names before my readers, it is simply because every one of
the following noblemen and gentlemen knew me in the
Crimea, and by consenting to assist me now record publicly
their opinion of my services there. And yet I may reasonably
on other grounds be proud of the fact, that it has
been stated publicly that my present embarrassments
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</SPAN></span>
originated in my charities and incessant labours among the
army, by</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>Major-General Lord Rokeby, K.C.B.<br/>
H.S.H. Prince Edward of Saxe Weimar, C.B.<br/>
His Grace the Duke of Wellington.<br/>
His Grace the Duke of Newcastle.<br/>
The Right Hon. Lord Ward.<br/>
General Sir John Burgoyne, K.C.B.<br/>
Major-General Sir Richard Airey, K.C.B.<br/>
Rear-Admiral Sir Stephen Lushington, K.C.B.<br/>
Colonel M’Murdo, C.B.<br/>
Colonel Chapman, C.B.<br/>
Lieutenant-Colonel Ridley, C.B.<br/>
Major the Hon. F. Keane.<br/>
W. H. Russell, Esq. (<i>Times</i> Correspondent).<br/>
W. T. Doyne, Esq.<br/></p>
</div>
<h3>THE END.</h3>
<p class="center" style="padding-top: 3em; padding-bottom: 3em;">London: Printed by Thomas Harrild, 11, Salisbury Square, Fleet Street.</p>
<div class="bbox">
<p><b>Transcriber's Note</b></p>
<p>Minor typographic errors have been corrected without note.</p>
<p>Page <SPAN href="#Page_42">42</SPAN>—omitted 'I' added—"I must do them credit to say, that they were never loath ..."</p>
Page <SPAN href="#Page_94">94</SPAN>—omitted 'the' added—"... which is hired by the Government, at
great cost ..."
<p>There are also a few Scots words in this text. These include 'waesome',
meaning sorrowful, woeful; and 'brash', meaning attack. Some archaic
spelling is also used (for example, secresy), which has been retained.</p>
</div>
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