登陆注册
19311500000252

第252章

Georgia was heavily garrisoned with troops and Atlanta had more than its share. The commandants of the Yankee troops in the various cities had complete power, even the power of life and death, over the civilian population, and they used that power. They could and did imprison citizens for any cause, or no cause, seize their property, hang them. They could and did harass and hamstring them with conflicting regulations about the operation of their business, the wages they must pay their servants, what they should say in public and private utterances and what they should write in newspapers. They regulated how, when and where they must dump their garbage and they decided what songs the daughters and wives of ex-Confederates could sing, so that the singing of “Dixie” or “Bonnie Blue Flag” became an offense only a little less serious than treason. They ruled that no one could get a letter out of. the post office without taking the Iron Clad oath and, in some instances, they even prohibited the issuance of marriage licenses unless the couples had taken the hated oath.

The newspapers were so muzzled that no public protest could be raised against the injustices or depredations of the military, and individual protests were silenced with jail sentences. The jails were full of prominent citizens and there they stayed without hope of early trial. Trial by jury and the law of habeas corpus were practically suspended. The civil courts still functioned after a fashion but they functioned at the pleasure of the military, who could and did interfere with their verdicts, so that citizens so unfortunate as to get arrested were virtually at the mercy of the military authorities. And so many did get arrested. The very suspicion of seditious utterances against the government, suspected complicity in the Ku Klux Klan, or complaint by a negro that a white man had been uppity to him were enough to land a citizen in jail. Proof and evidence were not needed. The accusation was sufficient. And thanks to the incitement of the Freedmen’s Bureau, negroes could always be found who were willing to bring accusations.

The negroes had not yet been given the right to vote but the North was determined that they should vote and equally determined that their vote should be friendly to the North. With this in mind, nothing was too good for the negroes. The Yankee soldiers backed them up in anything they chose to do, and the surest way for a white person to get himself into trouble was to bring a complaint of any kind against a negro.

The former slaves were now the lords of creation and, with the aid of the Yankees, the lowest and most ignorant ones were on top. The better class of them, scorning freedom, were suffering as severely as their white masters. Thousands of house servants, the highest caste in the slave population, remained with their white folks, doing manual labor which had been beneath them in the old days. Many loyal field hands also refused to avail themselves of the new freedom, but the hordes of “trashy free issue niggers,” who were causing most of the trouble, were drawn largely from the field-hand class.

In slave days, these lowly blacks had been despised by the house negroes and yard negroes as creatures of small worth. Just as Ellen had done, other plantation mistresses throughout the South had put the pickaninnies through courses of training and elimination to select the best of them for the positions of greater responsibility. Those consigned to the fields were the ones least willing or able to learn, the least energetic, the least honest and trustworthy, the most vicious and brutish. And now this class, the lowest in the black social order, was making life a misery for the South.

Aided by the unscrupulous adventurers who operated the Freedmen’s Bureau and urged on by a fervor of Northern hatred almost religious in its fanaticism, the former field hands found themselves suddenly elevated to the seats of the mighty. There they conducted themselves as creatures of small intelligence might naturally be expected to do. Like monkeys or small children turned loose among treasured objects whose value is beyond their comprehension, they ran wild—either from perverse pleasure in destruction or simply because of their ignorance.

To the credit of the negroes, including the least intelligent of them, few were actuated by malice and those few had usually been “mean niggers” even in slave days. But they were, as a class, childlike in mentality, easily led and from long habit accustomed to taking orders. Formerly their white masters had given the orders. Now they had a new set of masters, the Bureau and the Carpetbaggers, and their orders were: “You’re just as good as any white man, so act that way. Just as soon as you can vote the Republican ticket, you are going to have the white man’s property. It’s as good as yours now. Take it, if you can get it!”

Dazzled by these tales, freedom became a never-ending picnic, a barbecue every day of the week, a carnival of idleness and theft and insolence. Country negroes flocked into the cities, leaving the rural districts without labor to make the crops. Atlanta was crowded with them and still they came by the hundreds, lazy and dangerous as a result of the new doctrines being taught them. Packed into squalid cabins, smallpox, typhoid and tuberculosis broke out among them. Accustomed to the care of their mistresses when they were ill in slave days, they did not know how to nurse themselves or their sick. Relying upon their masters in the old days to care for their aged and their babies, they now had no sense of responsibility for their helpless. And the Bureau was far too interested in political matters to provide the care the plantation owners had once given.

同类推荐
  • 三国志平话

    三国志平话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 说疑

    说疑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 沩山警策句释记

    沩山警策句释记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大方广佛华严经-实叉难陀

    大方广佛华严经-实叉难陀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 崇陵传信录

    崇陵传信录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 冥王别逃:召鬼女王

    冥王别逃:召鬼女王

    都说人怕鬼三分,鬼怕人七分,却不知,这鬼却是怕夏灵槐十分!就连一般的冤魂厉鬼都不敢轻易靠近夏灵槐!但,十八岁生日收到的一份快递——一根普通到不能再普通的红绳,却彻底打破了她夏灵槐原本的生活!半面女尸、水管女鬼、哭泣的夜莺……这些一件件的灵异事件,开始自夏灵槐的生活中出现!而她,也渐渐的发现自己又有了新的技能——召鬼!以及那只,她召唤出来的万能的鬼……
  • 大宋遗民的亡朝岁月

    大宋遗民的亡朝岁月

    历史上,每一新旧朝代的更替,都会引起社会的剧烈动荡和政治力量的重新组合,有以新朝为“天命人旧”而顶礼膜拜者;有为旧朝尽忠殉难死节者;也有藏身于残山剩水之间,拒不合作者。他们头上顶着“义愤”、“责任”、“建设”,同时也在心中存着故朝归来的期待,但等到的却永远是泪尽胡尘里。他们,就是一群最可怜的帝国遗孤。被故朝抛弃,又不融于新朝的遗民们。
  • 一枚血玉

    一枚血玉

    她是至阴之人,从小便能看见鬼影。她也是一位遗体整容师,整日与尸体打交道。父亲为保她平安,重金拍下辟邪血玉。从她带上血玉的那一天,怪事便连连发生……她要如何回归平静的生活?她又是如何走进了一位法医暖男的世界?是偶然?还是必然?血玉的背后又有着什么样的故事?在这神秘诡异的嗜血路上,他们究竟是生?是死?
  • 清风闸

    清风闸

    演叙宋仁宗年间,浙江台州知府有一木行主孙大理,娶妻汤氏,生女孝姑。后汤氏病死,续娶强氏。一日,大理得一乞丐小继,便收留了他。强氏勾引小继通奸,并把大理勒死沉入井中。不久,又把孝姑嫁给破落户皮奉山(人称皮五腊子)。皮五吃酒赌钱,孝姑实难度日,欲寻短见,被其父阴魂救下……
  • 彼岸之刃

    彼岸之刃

    猪脚名曰“小强”一个擅长肉搏的杀手。喜欢光明正大的抢劫比如……现在此山是我开此树是我栽要想从此过留下票票来嘴里你要敢蹦出一个不字管杀不管埋!
  • 名将三国

    名将三国

    一个穿越军医到了三国时期成为了一个诸侯王,他惊奇的发现自己拥有了召唤历史名将的系统。本来想用系统吊打各路诸侯,没想到系统每召唤一名文臣武将就会乱入世界一名相近的文臣武将,说好的吊打呢?没关系!本王还有父子档师徒档兄弟档兄妹档连锁大召唤!
  • 乌苍

    乌苍

    乌情不无情用心而作给你一个用心而缔造的世界你若看而开心有悟我必掏心继续
  • 顾少追妻:女人乖乖复婚吧

    顾少追妻:女人乖乖复婚吧

    结婚三年,安素竟然一次都没有见过丈夫,苦守三年,愉快地接受了丈夫的离婚要求,只因为,她的谭琛终于回来了。顾斐然结婚三年,对自己素未谋面的妻子没有半分好感,却对那个已婚女人一见钟情,费尽心思只为让她多看他一眼。当他知道他一门心思穷追猛打的女人竟是自己离婚的妻子,而对方心里只住了谭琛一人,从未有他,他的自尊心爆炸了。“安素,你是我的妻子,我不可能将你让给任何人。”“我们已经离婚了。”某人压倒这小女人,坏坏地道:“离了可以再结。”
  • 制霸老公,请放手

    制霸老公,请放手

    她为了保住父亲生前的心血,被迫和他分手。从此他们形同陌路却又日日相见。他和别人相亲高调喊话,让众人关注。“相亲就相亲,我不在乎,我不在乎,我不在乎!”她无动于衷。正式订婚时她却意外出现,包中藏刀。“你敢和别人结婚,我就敢死在当场。”“张兮兮,是不是我把手里的股份给你,你就会和我睡。”他邪魅的问道。“你就不能把股份分几次给我,多睡几次!”捂脸~~
  • 大痞臣

    大痞臣

    据不完全统计,当今社会每一天,就有将近一百个传说故事消失,有人说,是因为现在的父母越来越忙,所以没有多余的时间,跟小孩子讲故事;也有人说,是现在已经没有人再相信传说,更加不相信传说中的英雄。