To Varina Howell Davis
Fortress Monore Va 21 Aug.”65
My Dear Wife,
I am now permitted to write to you, under two conditions viz: that I
confine myself to family matters, and that my letter shall be examined
by the U. S. Atty. Genl. before it is sent to you.
This will sufficiently explain to you the omission of subjects on
which you would desire me to write. I presume it is however permissible
for me to relieve your disappointment in regard to my silence on the
subject of future action towards me, by stating that of the purpose of
the authorities I know nothing.
To morrow I will be three months since we were suddenly and
unexpectedly separated, and many causes prominent among which has been
my anxiety for you and our children have made that quarter in seeming
duration long, very long. I sought permission to write to you that I
might make some suggestions as to your movements and as to domestic
arrangements.
The first and most important point has in the mean time been so far
decided by the journey of the older children that until a key is
furnished to open what is now to me unintelligible I can only speak in
very general terms, in regard to your future movements. It is to be
inferred that you have decided and I think wisely not to return to our
old home, at least in the present disturbed condition of society. Thus
you have the world before you but not where to choose, as the loss of
our property will require the selection to be, with a view to
subsistence. Should I regain my liberty before our “people” have become
vagrant there are many of them whose labor I could direct so as to make
it not wholly unprofitable. Their good faith under many trials, and the
mutual affection between them and myself make /me/ always solicitous for
their welfare and probably keep them expectant of my coming. Should my
fate be not to return to that country you can best be advised by Brother
Jos: as to what and how /it should be attempted, if any thing may be
done./ Always understand however that I do not mean that you should
attempt in person to do any thing in the matter. I often think of “old
Uncle Bob” and always with painful anxiety. If Sam. has rejoined him he
will do all in his power for the old man’s comfort and safety.
The Smith land had better be returned to the heirs. No deed was made and the payments were for moveable property /effects/ and for interest; their right to the property /land which alone remains/ is therefore clearly and /revives/ since I am now unable/to make the payment which is I believe
due, and shall be unable/ to fulfil the engagements hereafter to
mature; therefore the sooner the case is disposed of the better. Please
write to my Brother for me in such terms as you can well understand I
would use if allowed to write to him myself.
In like manner please write to my sisters.
I asked Jeff: V. when he & I parted, to join you as soon as he
could and to remain with you; he could render you much assistance as
well by his intelligence as his discretion. Have you heard from him? The
servant reported by the Newspapers to be with the children in New York, is I suppose Robert, indeed so hope.
Ellen came ashore, and it must have embarassed you greatly under the
circumstances to lose her before you could get another. Jim. reported
here that he knew where we had buried a large sum of gold at or near
Macon. This I heard after he had gone and in such manner as created the
impression that he /had/gone on the same ship with you. The ready
conclusion was that he had returned with assurances of zeal and fidelity
/to you and expecting/ to find an opportunity to to rob your trunks. and This greatly disturbed me until I found that he had gone by way of Raleigh.
Then remembering his complaint that he was not /to be/ furnished with
transportation from here; another explanation of his fiction was
afforded more creditable at least to his cunning. I have the prayer book
you sent, but the memorandum placed in it was witheld. The suit of dark
grey clothes has also been received. It was like you in moments of such
discomfort and annoyance as those to which you were subjected, to be
careful about my contingent and future wants. Some day I hope to be able
to tell you how in the long, weary hours of my confinement, busy memory
has brought many tributes to your tender and ardent affection. The
confidence in the shield of Innocence with which I tried to quiet your
apprehensions and to dry your tears at our parting, sustains me still.
If your fears have proved more prophetic than my hopes, yet do not
despond—“Tarry thou the Lord’s leisure; be strong, and He will comfort
thy heart.”
Every day twice or oftener I repeat the prayer of St. Chrysostom and
assemble you all, each separately noted, on the right is Winnie, then
Polly, Big-boy, Billie, then L-P. held by Aunty and sometimes, as
affection numbers the line, “the Little-man” is found between his
Brothers. x x x x x - - - - -
I daily repeat the hymn I last heard you sing, “Guide me” &c. It
is doubly dear to me for that association. The one which follows it in
our Book of Common prayer is also often present to me. It is a most
beautiful lesson of humility & benevolence.
I have had here fresh occasion to realize the kindness of my fellow
man. To the Surgeon and the Regtal. Chaplain I am under many
obligations. The officers of the Guard and of the Day have shown me
increased consideration, such as their orders would permit. The unjust
accusations which have been made against me in the newspapers of the day
might well have created prejudices against me. I have had no
opportunity to refute /them by proof/ nor have I sought to do so by such
statements of chronological and other easily to be verified facts which
I might perhaps have been induced to make under other circumstances;
& can therefore only attribute the perceptible change to those good
influences which are always at work to confound evil designs. Be not
alarmed by speculative reports concerning my condition. You can rely on
my fortitude, and God has given me much of resignation to His blessed
will. If it be His pleasure to reunite us, you will I trust find that
His Fatherly correction has been sanctified to me, and that even in
exile and obscurity I should be content to live /unknown, quietly to/
labor for the support of my family; and thus to convince those who have
misjudged me, that self seeking and ill regulated ambition are not
elements of my character.
Men are apt to be verbose when they speak of themselves and suffering
has a rare power to develop selfishness; so I have wandered from the
subject on which I proposed to write and have dwelt upon a person whose
company I have for some time past kept so exclusively that it must be
strange if he has not become tiresome.
Under the necessity before stated, and during our separation, you
will have /temporarily/ to select a place of abode where you will not be
wounded by unkind allusions to myself, where you will have proper
schools for the children and such social tone, moral and intellectual,
as will best conduce to their culture. As well for yourself as for them
you should endeavor to find a healthy location. To you a cold climate
has been most beneficial, such also will best serve to strengthen the
constitution of the children; and though the mind may hold mastery over
the body, yet a strong frame is a great advantage to a student, and
still more to him who in the busy world is called upon to apply his
knowledge. If the news gatherer has the rightly concluded that the
children were on their way to Canada, I suppose it must have been under some [temporary?]
/intermediate/ arrangement. You will sufficiently understand the
necessity for your presence with them and you must not allow your
affectionate solicitude for me to interfere with your care for them.
It has been reported in the newspapers that you had applied for
permission to visit me in my confinement; if you had been allowed to do
so the visit would have caused you disappointment at the time, and
bitter memories afterwards. You would not have been allowed to hold
private conversation with me and if we are permitted to correspond
freely in relation to personal matters, not connected with public
affairs, it would be a great consolation, and with it I recommend you to
be content.
Your stay in Savannah
has been prolonged much beyond my expectation and I fear beyond your
comfort. I do not know whether you are still there, but hope your
whereabouts may be known at Washington and will ask that this letter may there receive the proper address.
Have the articles belonging to you personally and which were
seized at the time of our capture been restored? You are aware that I
have had no opportunity to present the case, and therefore you have had
the unusual task of attending to it yourself. Money derived from the
sale of your jewelry and the horses presented to you by Gentlemen of
Richmond could hardly be put on the same footing with my private
property, and as little could they be regarded as public property, the
proper subject of capture in war. The Heads of Executive Departments
accustomed to consider questions of law and of fact, would I supposed
take a different view of the transaction from subaltern officers of the
Army — — —.
You will realize the necessity of extreme caution in regard to our
correspondence. The quid nuncs if they hear you have received a letter
from me will no doubt seek to extract something for their pursuit, and
your experience has taught you how little material serves to spin their
web.
Have you been sick? On the 21st of July little Maggie appeared to me
in a most vivid dream, warning me not to wake you &c. &c. You
know how little I have been accustomed to regard like things. Here such
visions have been frequent, nor have they always been without comfort.
I am reluctant to close this first letter to you after so long an
interval; but am warned that I may be abusing a privilege, as what I
write is to be read by those to whom the labor will not be relieved by
the interest which will support you.
If my dear Margaret is with you give to her my tenderest love, she
always appears to me associated with little Winnie. Kiss the Baby for
me, may her sunny face never be clouded, though dark the morning of her
life has been.
My dear Wife, equally the centre of my love and confidence, remember
how good the Lord has always been to me, how often he has wonderfully
preserved me, and put thy trust in Him.
Farewell, may He who tempers the wind to the shorn lamb, whose most
glorious attribute is mercy, guide and protect and provide for my
distressed family; and give to them and to me that grace which shall
lead us all to final rest in the mansions where there is peace that
passeth understanding. Once more farewell, Ever affectionately your
Husband
Jeffn,, Davis
From The Papers of Jefferson Davis, Volume 12, pp 13-17. Transcribed from the original, Transylvania University, Davis Collection.