The Story (continued)
Sherman's
invasion of Georgia is prefaced by: "While the women and children
weep, a great conqueror marches to the sea." Following the title,
blackness on the screen is followed by a combination fade-in and
iris opening. In a close-up shot, a mother sits anguished while she
comforts three frightened children who clutch onto her. They are
huddled together next to the destroyed frame or ashes of a charred
home. The view slowly pans from left to right to reveal that they
are sitting on a side of a forested hilltop. Down the hill is the
cause of the horrible destruction - Sherman's army marches through
a wide expanse of fertile, forest-lined land, burning and shooting
a path through Georgia. The iris opens up on their march to the sea
- the valley is in flames and strewn with corpses. The film cuts
back and forth between the two contrasting images.
The South is devastated by General Sherman's bombardment
and seige on "the breast of Atlanta." Sherman's army fires
upon the city, setting it ablaze. The billowing smoke is tinted in
flaming-red. The populace flee. The second Cameron son, Wade, is
killed in action during the bombardment of Atlanta. He lies on the
ground near a fence, as refugees from Atlanta stream past him. These
are "the last grey days of the Confederacy." The South's
food supplies are exhausted. On the battle lines before Petersburg,
the retreating Confederate armies have nothing to eat - a close-up
of parched corn kernels in a pan symbolizes their plight.
A sorely-needed Confederate food train is misled and
cut off by Union forces. General Lee orders an attempt to break through
and rescue the food train, with a bombardment and a flanking movement
just before daybreak. Ben Cameron ( "The Little Colonel")
receives his orders to charge at an appointed moment. The entrenchments
of the opposing armies are separated by only a few hundred feet.
Field artillery and mortars are fired. [Many of the military actions
were recorded at night. The panoramic, wide-frame Civil War battle
scenes are extraordinary, with spectacularly-staged and photographed
sequences - resembling Mathew Brady Civil War photographs. In some
scenes with vast scope and distance, actions takes place four miles
from the camera.]
Stoneman and Cameron youth eventually meet as enemies
on the battlefield. Ben, in a final desperate assault against the
Union command of Capt. Phil Stoneman, charges down the road leading
his troops, in a dramatic moving-camera shot, taken from a high angle.
Cameron is wounded in action when he leads a final assault carrying
the Confederate flag against the Union entrenchment line. He is saved
when the Union commander recognizes him. A subtitle "War's peace" is
illustrated with still-shots of trenches, piled with dead. War is
not glorified, but viewed as futile and desperate - on both sides.
The North is victorious. News of the death of their
second son Wade and of the eldest Ben near death in a Washington
D.C. hospital reach the Camerons.
"War, the breeder of hate." The seriously-injured "Little
Colonel" is in the military hospital set up in the Patents Office
where Elsie Stoneman is a nurse. Captain Phil Stoneman writes to sister
Elsie, asking her to take special care of his pal in the Union hospital
where she is a volunteer nurse. The letter is shown in close-up: "...use
your influence in any way possible for the welfare of my old boarding
school friend Col. Ben Cameron, who has been committed to your hospital.
Lovingly, your brother, Phil." There, Ben finally meets Elsie,
the girl of his dreams. He shows her the picture of her that he has
carried around for a long, long time.
Mother Cameron (Josephine Crowell) comes from Piedmont
to visit her stricken eldest boy. He faces a death warrant and possible
execution - after being falsely accused and condemned to death by
the North for spying: "The army surgeon tells of a secret influence
that has condemned Col. Cameron to be hanged as a guerilla."
Anguished over her son's impending fate, Ben's mother
journeys to Washington DC and President Lincoln (Joseph Henabery), "the
Great Heart," and pleads with him to show mercy and pardon her
son. She reports back to Ben that he has been spared: "Mr. Lincoln
has given back your life to me." Lincoln's merciful pardon of
the Southern soldier reflects his gracious attitude toward the entire
South. Mrs. Cameron returns back to Piedmont to attend to the failing
father of the family and tell him the good news.
The scene at Appomattox Courthouse, on the afternoon
of April 9, 1865, the surrender of Gen. Robt. E. Lee, C.S.A., to
Gen. U. S. Grant, USA., is recreated in another "historical
facsimile." This signals "the end of state sovereignty."
- "The soul of Daniel Webster calling to America: Liberty and
union, one and inseparable, now and forever." [These were Webster's
words of reply to Hayne in their famous debate when he defended the
Union -- they also serve as the film's final subtitle.] The same day,
Col. Cameron is discharged after recovery and leaves for home in Piedmont.
He kisses Elsie on the hand as he departs.
The South has been ravaged by their defeat, and food
and clothing are scarce. At the feast for the homecoming-brother,
parched corn and sweet potato coffee are prepared. "Southern
ermine," from raw cotton, is worn for the grand occasion and
preparations are made in the Cameron household.
The scene of the Little Colonel's return to his ruined
home is touching and poignant - and one of the greatest scenes in
early film history. Weary, Ben arrives at the front fence of his
devastated home, pausing to notice its disrepair. As he stands there,
his Little Sister and other family members expectantly await his
arrival inside. Ben slowly enters the fence gate and approaches the
front porch. Younger sister Flora bounces joyfully out of the front
door - but then hesitates when she sees his anguished expression.
They both feign happiness at first, and he notices the raw cotton
wool that she is wearing to imitate ermine. Both succumb to grateful
tears and the two sadly embrace on the front porch. He kisses her
hair, offering a mournful look in his eyes. She guides him into the
front door. From a side view (a camera angle change), the tender
hand of his unseen mother reaches out from behind the door and gradually
draws him inside. She enfolds her child to herself, welcoming him
home.
"The Radical leader's protest against Lincoln's
policy of clemency for the South." Hon. Congressman Austin Stoneman,
father of Phil and Elsie, agitates for the punishment of the South,
but President Lincoln refuses to take revenge. Lincoln is told:
Their leaders must be hanged and their states treated
as conquered provinces.
But Lincoln has a more lenient plan: "I shall
deal with them as though they had never been away." Under Lincoln's
plan, the South begins to be rebuilt. But then when "a healing
time of peace was at hand" came the "fated night of April
14, 1865." A gala performance to celebrate the surrender of
Lee is attended by the President and his staff. The young Stonemans
are also present. The play is "Our American Cousin," starring
Laura Keene. Lincoln is assassinated at Ford's Theatre by John Wilkes
Booth (Raoul Walsh), in a meticulously-recreated sequence, another "historical
facsimile." Booth leaps to the stage, crying
"Sic semper tyrannis!"
The Hon. Stoneman is told of Lincoln's assassination,
and informed: "You are now the greatest power in America." The
news is received in the South at the Cameron household. They respond
with apprehension and dismay to Lincoln's assassination: "Our
best friend is gone. What is to become of us now!" Lincoln's
tragic assassination marks the rapid descent of the South into disorder
and chaos. The First Part of the film concludes.
The Second Part of the Film:
"Reconstruction."
"The agony which the South endured that a nation
might be born."
"The blight of war does not end when hostilities
cease."
The film offers a preface to the second part:
This is an historical presentation of the Civil War
and Reconstruction Period, and is not meant to reflect on any race
or people of today.
Adventurers swarm out of the North to the South, to "cozen,
beguile, and use the negroes...In the villages the negroes were the
office holders, men who knew none of the uses of authority, except
its insolences." The policy of congressional leaders is determined
to overthrow civilization in the South, punish the South for seceding,
and to pursue their own agendas to promote black equality - "to
put the white South under the heel of the black South."
For self-preservation, the whites form a group called the Ku Klux Klan, "a
veritable empire of the South, to protect the Southern country." (Quotes
are taken from Woodrow Wilson's 'History of the American People.')
The "executive mansion" of the nation, the
seat of power, is shifted during Reconstruction from the White House
to the House of representatives on Capitol Hill. The "uncrowned
king" is the powerful Austin Stoneman, the fiery champion of
black equality in the South. Following the South's defeat, Stoneman
calls for his protege and aide Silas Lynch (George Siegmann), mulatto
(half African-American) leader of the blacks. When greeting him,
Stoneman orders: "Don't scrape to me. You are the equal of any
man here." Senator Charles Sumner is summoned, and forced to
acknowledge mulatto Lynch's position. Sumner proposes a less dangerous
policy in the extension of power to the freed race. In the next room,
Lydia listens to the conversation, wide-eyed and full of sexual excitement.
"Sowing the Wind."
Stoneman's protege Lynch is sent to the South with
a mission - to enforce the rule of blacks and carpetbaggers during
Reconstruction, and to exploit and corrupt the former slaves. His
task is to organize and wield the power of the negro vote, and to
agitate once-congenial Southern blacks to rise up and oppress the
traitorous Southern whites. As he leaves, Lynch shows a lustful interest
in Senator Stoneman's daughter Elsie.
Lynch makes Piedmont, South Carolina his headquarters. "Starting
the ferment,"
he induces the negroes to quit work. The blacks (freed slaves) are
seen leaving their work and dancing jigs, urged on by "scalawags" from
the North. The Freedman's Bureau is formed to get free supplies for
negroes - "The charity of a generous North misused to delude the
ignorant." The point is made that the good intentions of the northern
abolitionists ultimately lead to further unrest. The black militia
marches in the streets in Piedmont, having a "right" to the
sidewalk as much as any of the whites - they shove whites aside. Silas
Lynch, Stoneman's mulatto cohort, leads black militia in their efforts
to take over the South. Stoneman leaves for South Carolina, with daughter
Elsie, to see his policies carried out first hand. He is influenced
by his children to select the town of Piedmont for his sojourn.
The black Cameron maid tells one of the Northern blacks
in Stoneman's entourage:
"Yo' northern low down black trash, don't try no airs on me." Ben
is pleased to see Elsie, but refuses to shake Silas Lynch's hand. Lynch
is portrayed as "a traitor to his white patron and a greater traitor
to his own people, whom he plans to lead by an evil way to build himself
a throne of vaulting power." Stoneman is the guest of honor at
the Southern Union League rally before the election. Blacks are organized,
enrolled and given the franchise. |