FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   >>  
t he has been deprived of them. [_10th_ month] _8th._--Today we have a pass to go out to see the city. _9th._--We all went, thinking to do the whole city in a day, but before the time of our passes expired, we were glad to drag ourselves back to the rest and quiet of D.H. During the day we called upon our friend I.N. in the Patent Office. When he came to see us on the 7th, he stated he had called upon the President that afternoon to request him to release us and let us go home to our friends. The President promised to consider it over-night. Accordingly yesterday morning, as I.N. told us, he waited upon him again. He found there a woman in the greatest distress. Her son, only a boy of fifteen years and four months, having been enticed into the Army, had deserted and been sentenced to be shot the next day. As the clerks were telling her, the President was in the War Office and could not be seen, nor did they think he could attend to her case that day. I.N. found her almost wild with grief. "Do not despair, my good woman," said he, "I guess the President can be seen after a bit." He soon presented her case to the President, who exclaimed at once, "That must not be, I must look into that case, before they shoot that boy"; and telegraphed at once to have the order suspended. I.N. judged it was not a fit time to urge our case. We feel we can afford to wait, that a life may be saved. But we long for release. We do not feel easy to remain here. _11th._--Today we attended meeting held in the house of a Friend, Asa Arnold, living near here. There were but four persons beside ourselves. E.W.H. and C.L.A. showed their copy of the charges about to have been preferred against them in court-martial before they left their regiment, to a lawyer who attended the meeting. He laughed at the Specification of Mutiny, declaring such a charge could not have been lawfully sustained against them. The experiences of our new friends were similar to ours, except they fell among officers who usually showed them favour and rejoiced with them in their release. _13th._--L.M.M. had quite an adventure yesterday. He being fireman with another was in the furnace room among three or four others, when the officer of the day, one of the surgeons, passed around on inspection. "Stand up," he ordered them, wishing to be saluted. The others arose; but by no means L. The order was repeated for his benefit, but he sat with his cap on, telling the surge
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   >>  



Top keywords:
President
 

release

 

friends

 

telling

 
showed
 
yesterday
 

attended

 
meeting
 

called

 

Office


remain

 

preferred

 
regiment
 

persons

 
martial
 
Arnold
 

charges

 

living

 
Friend
 

rejoiced


passed

 

surgeons

 

inspection

 
officer
 

ordered

 
benefit
 

repeated

 

wishing

 

saluted

 

furnace


sustained

 

lawfully

 
experiences
 

similar

 

charge

 

laughed

 
Specification
 
Mutiny
 

declaring

 

adventure


fireman

 

officers

 

favour

 

lawyer

 
request
 

promised

 
afternoon
 

stated

 
Patent
 

waited