Robert Enoch Withers
Published: 2013-09
Total Pages: 190
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1907 edition. Excerpt: ... CHAPTER XIV. WAR. At no period of my life had I experienced such feelings of anxiety, apprehension and discomfort as oppressed me at this time. The idea of leaving behind me a wife and eight little girls without a protector, was in itself most distressing, but when to this was added the expectation of an addition to the number which might occur at any hour, I was placed in a most embarrassing dilemma. I came to the conclusion that I would not leave home before the expected event occurred, as no consideration of duty or honor demanded such a sacrifice. Providentially, however, my tenth daughter was ushered into a troubled world about midnight of the twenty-second of April. We were under marching orders for eight a . m. on the twentythird, about eight hours afterwards. My wife, with that unselfish courage which always characterized her, said I must accompany the battalion if I thought it my duty to do so. I continued to balance the conflicting claims of domestic and public duty without reaching a decision, until the beating of the drums and the whistle of the awaiting train forced me to action. I then cheered my wife with the assurance that I would almost surely be able to get leave of absence for a few days before the command would leave Richmond, and would then pay her a visit, and with this promise we parted. I doubt if any other soldier answered the call leaving a wife in bed and a baby eight hours old. Before I started, my wife asked what we should call the baby, I answered that I left it entirely to her. By some means the peculiar circumstances of the case became public, and the Richmond Whig, at that time a journal of large influence and circulation suggested as appropriate for the little stranger the name of "Virginia Secessia, ..".