Before the Dawn: A Story of the Fall of Richmond
The Sun of Saratoga A Soldier of Manhattan A Herald of the West The Last Rebel In Circling Camps In Hostile Red The Wilderness Road My Captive
For the rhyming pun, given by a member of The Mosaic Club, and quoted in the third chapter of this book, the author is indebted to T. C. DeLeon's Four Years in Rebel Capitals .
A tall, well-favoured youth, coming from the farther South, boarded the train for Richmond one raw, gusty morning. He carried his left arm stiffly, his face was thin and brown, and his dingy uniform had holes in it, some made by bullets; but his air and manner were happy, as if, escaped from danger and hardships, he rode on his way to pleasure and ease.
He sat for a time gazing out of the window at the gray, wintry landscape that fled past, and then, having a youthful zest for new things, looked at those who traveled with him in the car. The company seemed to him, on the whole, to lack novelty and interest, being composed of farmers going to the capital of the Confederacy to sell food; wounded soldiers like himself, bound for the same place in search of cure; and one woman who sat in a corner alone, neither speaking nor spoken to, her whole aspect repelling any rash advance.
Prescott always had a keen eye for woman and beauty, and owing to his long absence in armies, where both these desirable objects were scarce, his vision had become acute; but he judged that this lone type of her sex had no special charm. Tall she certainly was, and her figure might be good, but no one with a fair face and taste would dress as plainly as she, nor wrap herself so completely in a long, brown cloak that he could not even tell the colour of her eyes. Beautiful women, as he knew them, always had a touch of coquetry, and never hid their charms wholly.
Prescott's attention wandered again to the landscape rushing past, but finding little of splendour or beauty, it came back, by and by, to the lone woman. He wondered why she was going to Richmond and what was her name. She, too, was now staring out of the window, and the long cloak hiding her seemed so shapeless that he concluded her figure must be bad. His interest declined at once, but rose again with her silence and evident desire to be left alone.
Joseph A. Altsheler
Before the Dawn
A Story of the Fall of Richmond
JOSEPH A. ALTSHELER
OTHER BOOKS BY JOSEPH A. ALTSHELER
CONTENTS
BEFORE THE DAWN
CHAPTER I
A WOMAN IN BROWN
CHAPTER II
A MAN'S MOTHER
CHAPTER III
THE MOSAIC CLUB
CHAPTER IV
THE SECRETARY MOVES
CHAPTER V
AN ELUSIVE FACE
CHAPTER VI
THE PURSUIT OF A WOMAN
CHAPTER VII
THE COTTAGE IN THE SIDE STREET
CHAPTER VIII
THE PALL OF WINTER
CHAPTER IX
ROBERT AND LUCIA
CHAPTER X
FEEDING THE HUNGRY
CHAPTER XI
MR. SEFTON MAKES A CONFIDENCE
CHAPTER XII
A FLIGHT BY TWO
CHAPTER XIII
LUCIA'S FAREWELL
CHAPTER XIV
PRESCOTT'S ORDEAL
CHAPTER XV
THE GREAT RIVALS
CHAPTER XVI
THE GREAT REVIVAL
CHAPTER XVII
THE WILDERNESS
CHAPTER XVIII
DAY IN THE WILDERNESS
CHAPTER XIX
NIGHT IN THE WILDERNESS
CHAPTER XX
THE SECRETARY LOOKS ON
CHAPTER XXI
A DELICATE SITUATION
CHAPTER XXII
THE LONE SENTINEL
CHAPTER XXIII
OUT OF THE FOREST
CHAPTER XXIV
THE DESPATCH BEARER
CHAPTER XXV
THE MOUNTAIN GENERAL
CHAPTER XXVI
CALYPSO
CHAPTER XXVII
THE SECRETARY AND THE LADY
CHAPTER XXVIII
THE WAY OUT
CHAPTER XXIX
THE FALL OF RICHMOND
CHAPTER XXX
THE TELEGRAPH STATION
CHAPTER XXXI
THE COIN OF GOLD